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  1. Dictionary
    embrace
    /ɪmˈbreɪs/

    verb

    noun

    • 1. an act of holding someone closely in one's arms: "they were locked in an embrace"
    • 2. an act of accepting something willingly or enthusiastically: "their eager embrace of foreign influences"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. EMBRACE definition: 1. to accept something enthusiastically: 2. to hold someone tightly with both arms to express…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of EMBRACE is to clasp in the arms : hug. How to use embrace in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Embrace.

  4. to hold someone tightly with both arms to express love, liking, or sympathy, or when greeting or leaving someone: She saw them embrace on the station platform. He leaned over to embrace the child. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. embrace verb (INCLUDE) C1 [ T ] formal.

  5. To embrace something is to welcome it with open arms, hold, hug, accept completely. You might embrace your sweetheart, or even changes in technology. Embrace is from the French verb embrasser, which started out meaning "to clasp in the arms" (but now includes kissing).

  6. to take in with the eye or the mind. to encircle; surround; enclose: a secret garden embraced by wild shrubs. to include or contain: An encyclopedia embraces a great number of subjects. Synonyms: embody, cover, comprise. Antonyms: exclude. verb (used without object) , em·braced, em·brac·ing. to join in an embrace. noun.

  7. If you embrace someone, you put your arms around them and hold them tightly, usually in order to show your love or affection for them. You can also say that two people embrace.

  8. [transitive] embrace something to accept an idea, a proposal, a set of beliefs, etc., especially when it is done with enthusiasm. to embrace democracy/feminism/Islam; It is unlikely that such countries will embrace capitalist ideas.