The place where water or air is taken into a pipe or conduit; opposed to outlet.
The word 'intake' is correct and usable in written English. It is most often used as a noun and can refer to the act of taking something in, or the amount taken in. For example, "The student was advised to increase their water intake.".
Some of the new intake on the Labour benches is very inspiring.
So, if we are going to be tough on border protection to avoid people drowning at sea, we also need to be compassionate by increasing the humanitarian refugee intake.
While there's more than one way to train as a teacher, and growing numbers of training courses are now taking place in schools through the Schools Direct programme (analysis by UUK of the 2014/2015 intake shows that School Direct allocations increased by nearly 60%), the number of students choosing the university route remains significant.
Harmful consumption of alcohol rose from eighth to fifth leading cause of death and disability, worldwide, between 1990 and 2010 and the OECD says that that four in five drinkers would reduce their risk of death from any causes if they cut their alcohol intake by one unit a week.
Cruden later revealed that he "made a poor decision regarding the limits of my alcohol intake" and that as a result would forever "carry the burden of shame and disappointment".
During a Code Blue, the city relaxes the usual intake process for people who want to access shelters and "drop-in" centers and doubles the number of teams that search for homeless people at risk.
Related: Post-election Scotland prepares for an uncertain, exciting future While the undisputed single biggest shift in the new intake is the dramatic increase in Scottish National party MPs at Westminster, equality campaigners are celebrating record numbers of women with almost one in three MPs now female.
Awesome tool! I started using it one year ago and I never had to look for another app
Ha Thuy Vy
MA of Applied Linguistic, Maquarie University, Australia