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inclusion
[ in-kloo-zhuhn ]
noun
- the act of including.
- the state of being included.
- something that is included.
- the practice or policy of including and integrating all people and groups in activities, organizations, political processes, etc., especially those who are disadvantaged, have suffered discrimination, or are living with disabilities: Our company is committed to addressing issues of diversity and inclusion in the workplace.
Political and civic inclusion is vital to a sustainable democracy.
Our company is committed to addressing issues of diversity and inclusion in the workplace.
- the educational policy of placing students with physical or mental disabilities in regular classrooms and providing them with certain accommodations.
- Biology. a body suspended in the cytoplasm, as a granule.
- Mineralogy. a solid body or a body of gas or liquid enclosed within the mass of a mineral.
- Petrography. xenolith.
- Logic, Mathematics. the relationship between two sets when the second is a subset of the first.
inclusion
/ ɪˈːə /
noun
- the act of including or the state of being included
- something included
- geology a solid fragment, liquid globule, or pocket of gas enclosed in a mineral or rock
- maths
- the relation between two sets that obtains when all the members of the first are members of the second ⊆Y
- the relation that obtains between two sets when the first includes the second but not vice versa ⊂Y
- engineering a foreign particle in a metal, such as a particle of metal oxide
Other Word Forms
- ԴDz···Dz noun
- ···Dz noun
- ···Dz noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of inclusion1
Example Sentences
The program brought together a Marine Corps band that was dissolved as part of the administration’s purge of diversity, equity and inclusion programs in the military.
California joined several other states Friday in suing the Trump administration over its demand that public schools eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives or risk losing federal funding.
Instead it is using our nation’s foundational civil rights law as a pretext to coerce states into abandoning efforts to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion through lawful programs and policies.”
While advocacy groups focus on acceptance and inclusion they avoid "uncomfortable truths about children like mine", Emily May, a mother of a child with autism, wrote in a New York Times opinion piece on Friday.
California will not comply with Trump order to certify its 1,000 school districts have ended diversity, equity and inclusion programs -- risking federal dollars.
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