To allow (something that one dislikes or disagrees with) to continue to exist or occur without interference; accept or undergo, often unwillingly.
To make more concise (e.g. the contents of a book or an article).
Something that is compiled (as into a single book or file)
1 This week the markets have continued to digest last week's Budget Speech.
2 Bacteria are essential to our survival since they help us digest food.
3 Dr Elwin seemed to digest this information for rather a long time.
4 It is a relatively new trend for a national manager to digest .
5 Otherwise, the field contains the computer HMAC message digest for the message.
6 In the saliva is the ptyalin, which begins to digest the starch.
7 There was just too much information to digest in a single discussion.
8 Glory Solomon needed that alone time to digest the newspaper story privately.
9 The parasympathetic is more about the idea of digest , rest and process.
10 All he needed was time to digest what Höglund had told him.
11 Right, I'm off to get some lunch and digest what happened there.
12 He wanted to rest and digest the adrenalin, draw in the moment.
13 In European stocks, there are also plenty of corporate results to digest .
14 The way foods are processed can also make them easier to digest .
15 Then give the stomach food that the organs can digest and assimilate.
16 Mary stands there, unable to digest this, struggling in vain to remember.
Другие примеры для термина "digest"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Об этом термине Глагол
Изъявительное наклонение · Настоящее
Digest в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки