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adaptation
[ ad-uhp-tey-shuhn ]
noun
- the act of adapting.
- the state of being adapted; adjustment.
- something produced by adapting:
an adaptation of a play for television.
- Biology.
- any alteration in the structure or function of an organism or any of its parts that results from natural selection and by which the organism becomes better fitted to survive and multiply in its environment.
- a form or structure modified to fit a changed environment.
- the ability of a species to survive in a particular ecological niche, especially because of alterations of form or behavior brought about through natural selection.
- Physiology. the decrease in response of sensory receptor organs, as those of vision, touch, temperature, olfaction, audition, and pain, to changed, constantly applied, environmental conditions.
- Ophthalmology. the regulating by the pupil of the quantity of light entering the eye.
- Also a·dap·tion [] Sociology. a slow, usually unconscious modification of individual and social activity in adjustment to cultural surroundings.
adaptation
/ ˌædəpˈteɪʃən; ˌædæp- /
noun
- the act or process of adapting or the state of being adapted; adjustment
- something that is produced by adapting something else
- something that is changed or modified to suit new conditions or needs
- biology an inherited or acquired modification in organisms that makes them better suited to survive and reproduce in a particular environment
- physiol the decreased response of a sense organ to a repeated or sustained stimulus
- psychol (in learning theory) the weakening of a response to a stimulus with repeated presentation of the stimulus without reinforcement; applied mainly to innate responses
- social welfare alteration to a dwelling to make it suitable for a disabled person, as by replacing steps with ramps
adaptation
/ ăd′ăp-tā′shən /
- A change in structure, function, or behavior by which a species or individual improves its chance of survival in a specific environment. Adaptations develop as the result of natural selection operating on random genetic variations that are capable of being passed from one generation to the next. Variations that prove advantageous will tend to spread throughout the population.
adaptation
- The changes made by living systems in response to their environment. Heavy fur, for example, is one adaptation to a cold climate .
Other Words From
- adap·tation·al adjective
- adap·tation·al·ly adverb
- counter·adap·tation noun
- inter·a·daption noun
- misad·ap·tation noun
- nonad·ap·tation noun
- nonad·ap·tation·al adjective
- read·ap·tation noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of adaptation1
A Closer Look
Example Sentences
But that enormous level of cultural impact is precisely what makes a film adaptation of “Wicked” a dicey decision.
Davis won an Oscar in 2017 for playing the long-suffering wife opposite Denzel Washington in the film adaptation of August Wilson’s “Fences.”
Certainly, there could have been a more straightforward adaptation of Colson Whitehead’s acclaimed novel about the friendship between two Black boys at a brutal Florida reform school in the early 1960s.
Habituation -- adaptation's less-glamorous sibling -- involves the lessening response to a stimulus after repeated exposure.
This suggests that local populations might have special adaptations to their specific environments, making it even more crucial to protect them all.
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