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  1. Dictionary
    co-opt
    /ˌkəʊˈɒpt/

    verb

    • 1. appoint to membership of a committee or other body by invitation of the existing members: "the committee may co-opt additional members for special purposes"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 3 meanings: 1. If you co-opt someone, you persuade them to help or support you. 2. If someone is co-opted into a group, they.... Click for more definitions.

  3. The meaning of CO-OPT is to choose or elect as a member. How to use co-opt in a sentence.

  4. To co-opt something is to take possession of it to use it for your own purposes. Don't co-opt your friend's short story title — take the time to come up with your own! When you co-opt an idea, you use it as though you'd come up with it, despite the fact that someone else thought of it first.

  5. 1. To elect as a fellow member of a group. 2. To appoint summarily. 3. To take or assume for one's own use; appropriate: co-opted the criticism by embracing it. 4. To neutralize or win over (an independent minority, for example) through assimilation into an established group or culture: co-opt rebels by giving them positions of authority.

  6. co-opt somebody/something (disapproving) to change somebody/something to a different role from the usual or original one; to take somebody's idea and use it for your own purposes. Politicians have been trying to co-opt the movement without embracing its values.

  7. Co-opt generally means to elect into a body by the votes of an existing group. It can also mean taking or assuming something for one’s own use, typically without the owner’s permission, or to neutralize or win over someone's hostility or resistance by assimilation into the group through appointing them to a position.

  8. Sep 21, 2024 · co-opt (third-person singular simple present co-opts, present participle co-opting, simple past and past participle co-opted) To elect as a fellow member of a group, such as a committee. To commandeer, appropriate or take over. To absorb or assimilate into an established group.

  9. To persuade or lure (an opponent) to join one's own system, party, etc. To make use of for one's own purposes; take over or adopt. To neutralize or win over (an independent minority, for example) through assimilation into an established group or culture. Co-opt rebels by giving them positions of authority.

  10. Definitions of 'co-opt' 1. If you co-opt someone, you persuade them to help or support you. [...] 2. If someone is co-opted into a group, they are asked by that group to become a member, rather than joining or being elected in the normal way. [...] 3.

  11. co•opt (kō opt′), v.t. to elect into a body by the votes of the existing members. to assimilate, take, or win over into a larger or established group: The fledgling Labor party was coopted by the Socialist party.