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to infuse with
verb
To cause to become an element of something; to insert or fill.
Exact(12)
But, lacking anything in the script to infuse with life, they mainly just show up and follow the steps.
Anything, aside from a stream of words that even Myers, with his supreme artistic delicacy, was unable to infuse with drama?
He's focused on technology because of the city's new development project, "the 195 relocation", a 25-acre downtown development project he's hoping to infuse with startups.
All this showiness comes at the expense of the Normans, though, whom Bachelder has managed to infuse with a tender, flawed humanity.
Mr. Cuomo is a lead investor in a consortium aiming to acquire a small Long Island bank, which it plans to infuse with cash and expand around New York City and its suburbs.
(Motorola, another old-timer that Google will now be trying to infuse with new life, is still just about in the list with a 2.2percentt share).
Similar(47)
"I like to infuse goofiness with education".
Add garlic and jalapeño to infuse oil with their flavors.
Somehow Cox manages to infuse them with freshness and verve.
Manzi wants to infuse government with a culture of experimentation.
Yet the dance remained a fascinating attempt to infuse capoeira with lyricism.
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