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recapitulate
[ ree-kuh-pich-uh-leyt ]
verb (used with object)
- to review by a brief summary, as at the end of a speech or discussion; summarize.
- Biology. (of an organism) to repeat (ancestral evolutionary stages) in its development.
- Music. to restate (the exposition) in a sonata-form movement.
verb (used without object)
- to sum up statements or matters.
recapitulate
/ ˌriːkəˈpɪtjʊˌleɪt /
verb
- to restate the main points of (an argument, speech, etc); summarize
- tr (of an animal) to repeat (stages of its evolutionary development) during the embryonic stages of its life
- to repeat at some point during a piece of music (material used earlier in the same work)
Derived Forms
- ˌrecaˈpitulative, adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of recapitulate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of recapitulate1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Still, he pointed out, scientists are recapitulating the brain’s visual processing power with computations in more detail, potentially leading to better visual processing in AI.
Rather, it’s to recapitulate our nervous system, from input to output, inside the controlled environment of a Petri dish.
Two, we have the mega computational powerhouse called machine learning to recapitulate biology in silicon.
He had left out the feminine element; obviously he must recapitulate.
It will be needless here to recapitulate the tale of Rip van Winkle himself.
Let me, therefore, recapitulate the results of the investigations contained in this and the two preceding chapters.
It was his supreme ambition to recapitulate modern science, to write the De natura rerum of our age!
I will not recapitulate: the cases I have cited, and the conclusions drawn from them, are brought into a very narrow compass.
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