"Adopting" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
"Adopting" means to take something or someone into one's own, usually referring to the act of legally or formally accepting a child as one's own, or embracing a new idea, belief, or practice. It can also mean to formally agree to follow a particular law, rule, or standard.
1. The couple decided to adopt a child after years of struggling with infertility.
2. Many companies are adopting remote work policies due to the pandemic.
3. She has fully adopted her partner's cultural traditions, making them an integral part of her life.
4. The government is encouraging farmers to adopt sustainable agricultural practices.
5. Our team quickly adopted the new project management software, leading to improved efficiency.
I'm sorry, but "adonize" does not appear to be a recognized word in the English language. If you meant "Adonis," it refers to a mythical Greek god of beauty and desire, often associated with vegetation and fertility.
To adopt means to formally take someone else's child as your own, providing them with a legal status and rights equivalent to biological offspring. It also refers to the act of accepting, following, or implementing something, such as an idea, principle, or method, as one's own.
"Adoptable" refers to something or someone that is suitable or eligible for adoption, typically in the context of animals or children. It implies that the individual or creature is ready and available to be taken in by a new family or caregiver. For example, an "adoptable dog" means the dog is ready for adoption from an animal shelter or rescue organization.
"Adopted" refers to taking someone else's child into one's own family and legally recognizing them as one's own offspring, or to formally accept and implement a new idea, policy, or practice.
An adoptee is a person who has been legally adopted, meaning they have been taken into the care and legal responsibility of someone other than their biological parents, usually forming a permanent family relationship.
"Adoptees" refers to individuals who have been legally adopted, meaning they have been taken into a new family and given the legal status of a child or offspring in that family, often as a result of being born to different parents or due to circumstances such as orphanhood or abandonment.
An adopter is someone who takes on, accepts, or starts to use a new idea, system, or practice. In the context of adoption, it refers to a person who legally takes a child as their own, providing care and parental responsibilities.
"Adopters" refers to individuals or groups who adopt something, such as a new idea, technology, practice, or child. They embrace and take on the new concept or item, often becoming early supporters or users of it. In the context of technology, adopters can be classified into categories like innovators, early adopters, early majority, late majority, and laggards, based on their willingness to accept new technologies. In the context of adoption of children, adopters are those who legally become the parents of a child who is not biologically theirs.