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Enrichment   /ɛnrˈɪtʃmənt/  /ɪnrˈɪtʃmənt/   Listen
Enrichment

noun
1.
Act of making fuller or more meaningful or rewarding.
2.
A gift that significantly increases the recipient's wealth.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Enrichment" Quotes from Famous Books



... fulfilling the desires. The two belong most intimately together. The new means of fulfilment stimulate new desires of intellect and emotion and will, and the new desires lead to further means of their satisfaction. Thus there is an incessant automatic enrichment, an endless differentiation, a thousand new needs on the height of civilization where the primitive race found a few elementary demands, and a thousand new schemes of material technique and of social, institutional life where the lower culture found ...
— Psychology and Social Sanity • Hugo Muensterberg

... uses for the persons or things which are now wasted in life is to be the glorious work of the men of the next generation, and that which will contribute most to their enrichment. ...
— How to Succeed - or, Stepping-Stones to Fame and Fortune • Orison Swett Marden

... had undergone; the Spaniards, on the other hand, found their attention occupied by the unexpected arrival of a Spanish expedition commanded by Pedro de Alvarado. This leader had performed his part in the conquest of Mexico, and had now hastened to the South in order to ascertain what chances of enrichment were to be met with in the land, the reputation of which was now spreading itself abroad. For a while it looked very much as if open warfare would result between the rival parties. In the end, however, Pizarro consented to buy the departure of Alvarado, and this leader retired heavy ...
— South America • W. H. Koebel

... are brought into close contact with those of her offspring. Her blood seeps over into the transformed allantois which is now called a placenta. From this it is handed over to the offspring, which thus receives from the mother her blood, and returns its own used blood for enrichment and purification. So the allantois of the reptile has become the placenta of the mammal. In the first instance it served only as an organ of respiration. Now it has come to supply the embryo with rich blood containing both food and ...
— The Meaning of Evolution • Samuel Christian Schmucker

... and Christianity, and especially to Science, this enrichment of Evolution is important. And, on the part of Christianity, the contribution to the system of Nature of a second barrier is of real scientific value. At first it may seem merely to increase the difficulty. But in reality it abolishes it. However paradoxical it seems, it is nevertheless ...
— Natural Law in the Spiritual World • Henry Drummond


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