Definition of embeddedness in English:
embeddedness
(also imbeddedness)
nounɛmˈbɛdɪdnəsɪmˈbɛdɪdnəsemˈbedədnəs
mass nounThe quality of being firmly and deeply ingrained or fixed in place.
the cultural embeddedness of economic and political practices
Example sentencesExamples
- He calls such a symbiotic relationship of cultural and technical dynamics a "communications environment" to underscore the social embeddedness of the technology.
- This model of media production work neglects in particular the social embeddedness of meaning.
- Just in terms of the embeddedness, culture for me is not really something separate.
- They revealed a mutual embeddedness of social history and art where the one could not be fully comprehended without the other.
- Under a microscope, it definitely shows imbeddedness into the base.
- She evinces a close attention to visual prosody: the look of texts on the page and their necessary imbeddedness in the materiality of that page through details like size, cut, color, and watermark.
- The forum consists of a series of cultural inquiries into science and technology but not in the sense of either interrogating the cultural consequences of technology or highlighting the cultural embeddedness of science.
- This article explores the relationship between embeddedness and technology-oriented functions among three types of subsidiaries and for four cities.
- The relevant historical materials suggest that this emergence derived from the deep embeddedness of survey photography in an instrumental matrix of graphic disciplines.
- In the villages, faith has a more intrinsic imbeddedness.