permeate 的 2 个定义
per·me·at·ed, per·me·at·ing.
per·me·at·ed, per·me·at·ing.
- to become diffused; penetrate.
permeate 近义词
filter, spread throughout
更多permeate例句
- The new business game feels like a race to the bottom now that permeates everything, from media pricing to how much the client pays the agency.
- Key evidence in favor of this hypothesis emerged when astronomers discovered the largest known magnetic field in the cosmos — 10 million light-years of magnetized space permeating the voids between galaxy clusters.
- She thinks there’s an amplified “religiosity” that permeates after the death of a young rapper.
- Soon that appreciation for those on medicine’s front lines had spread across the country and permeated the media.
- The 29-year-old congressional representative for New York’s 14th district voiced a worry permeating the lives of many in the post-Baby Boomer generations.
- As AOL evolved, this ethos of personalization began to permeate the entire user experience.
- The colors, lines, and shapes that permeate the film are truly a sight to behold.
- Double-think, censorship, and fear permeate daily life, often subconsciously.
- But its presence speaks to the contradictions that permeate Muslim society.
- The New York Times editorial page does not permeate across all of America.
- But now quiet, save for an undescribable, whispering overtone that seemed to permeate the air.
- In this world our spirits not only permeate matter but find their only expression through its medium.
- Extravagance and exaggeration permeate his most commonplace observations.
- The spirit of unrepentant cruelty has thus been allowed to permeate the whole administration.
- Resolved gradually to permeate, it has not been revolutionary: it has relied on the slow growth of opinion.