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be embraced for
verb
To clasp in the arms with affection; to take in the arms; to hug.
Exact(10)
Cultured meat, said Prof Wrangham, should be embraced for this reason alone — because humans like meat so much.
Jerry will be remembered as one of the greatest composers heard on Broadway, and his music will continue to be embraced for generations to come.
The age of autonomy should be embraced for another reason: its optimistic theory of human nature makes more sense than the one it replaced.
All Out is bringing together people of all identities to build a world in which everyone can live freely and be embraced for who they are.
It is an urge that should be embraced, for we all know that entertaining at home has become rare, if not rarefied.
In his landmark work, "Dementia Reconsidered: The Person Comes First," published in 1997, Kitwood insisted that people with dementia, rather than being seen as debilitated, should be embraced for what they can teach the cognitively intact.
Similar(49)
"It's really being embraced for solving a lot of problems.
Like the Playboy bunny, she was embraced for the very qualities that would once have made her anathema to feminists.
When Diana, the Princess of Wales, declared that there were three people in her marriage, she was embraced for this indiscretion.
He is embraced for the heroics that made him Smokin' Joe, an uncomplicated fighting man, naive perhaps, but dignified and honest.
Similarly, Bryant and O'Neal, the pre-eminent players of their day at their positions, are embraced for elevating the Lakers to dominant status in team sports.
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