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Flag: gbEnglishMerriam-Webster Dictionary

class='d_link'>colony //areas colonized by European powers //It [Aléria, France] was, at different times in history, colonized by the Greeks, Etruscans, Carthaginians, and Romans. — Kristina Killgrove //Pacific Islanders—Hawaiians, Samoans, the Chamorro of Guam—were and remain colonized by the United States … — Viet Thanh Nguyen //Before the U.S.'s occupation of the roughly 7,500 islands, Spain colonized the Philippines and Mexico concurrently for around 300 years … — Amanda Albee //As the indigenous people of North America, Native Americans were colonized on their own land, the places to which they trace their social, cultural, and religious origins. — Kate A. Berry et al. //Portuguese officials are keenly aware of their checkered legacy. They were the first Europeans to colonize in Asia … — Mark Landler
[T] to migrate to and settle in (an inhabited or uninhabited area) to establish a colony in //the areas of New England colonized by the Puritans //… the seaside town of Puerto Madryn, named by the Welsh settlers who colonized the few river valleys of Patagonia. — Anita McConnell
[T/I]
biology, of an organism to spread to and develop in a new area or habitat //… usually the first plant to colonize newly formed sand spits and newly deposited sands on the barrier islands … — Robert H. Mohlenbrock
medical, of a microorganism to multiply in or on a host or an inanimate object or surface //C. diff. is a spore-forming, toxin-producing bacterium that can
class='d_link'>colony //areas colonized by European powers //It [Aléria, France] was, at different times in history, colonized by the Greeks, Etruscans, Carthaginians, and Romans. — Kristina Killgrove //Pacific Islanders—Hawaiians, Samoans, the Chamorro of Guam—were and remain colonized by the United States … — Viet Thanh Nguyen //Before the U.S.'s occupation of the roughly 7,500 islands, Spain colonized the Philippines and Mexico concurrently for around 300 years … — Amanda Albee //As the indigenous people of North America, Native Americans were colonized on their own land, the places to which they trace their social, cultural, and religious origins. — Kate A. Berry et al. //Portuguese officials are keenly aware of their checkered legacy. They were the first Europeans to colonize in Asia … — Mark Landler
[T] to migrate to and settle in (an inhabited or uninhabited area) to establish a colony in //the areas of New England colonized by the Puritans //… the seaside town of Puerto Madryn, named by the Welsh settlers who colonized the few river valleys of Patagonia. — Anita McConnell
[T/I]
biology, of an organism to spread to and develop in a new area or habitat //… usually the first plant to colonize newly formed sand spits and newly deposited sands on the barrier islands … — Robert H. Mohlenbrock
medical, of a microorganism to multiply in or on a host or an inanimate object or surface //C. diff. is a spore-forming, toxin-producing bacterium that can
class='d_link'>colony //areas colonized by European powers //It [Aléria, France] was, at different times in history, colonized by the Greeks, Etruscans, Carthaginians, and Romans. — Kristina Killgrove //Pacific Islanders—Hawaiians, Samoans, the Chamorro of Guam—were and remain colonized by the United States … — Viet Thanh Nguyen //Before the U.S.'s occupation of the roughly 7,500 islands, Spain colonized the Philippines and Mexico concurrently for around 300 years … — Amanda Albee //As the indigenous people of North America, Native Americans were colonized on their own land, the places to which they trace their social, cultural, and religious origins. — Kate A. Berry et al. //Portuguese officials are keenly aware of their checkered legacy. They were the first Europeans to colonize in Asia … — Mark Landler
[T] to migrate to and settle in (an inhabited or uninhabited area) to establish a colony in //the areas of New England colonized by the Puritans //… the seaside town of Puerto Madryn, named by the Welsh settlers who colonized the few river valleys of Patagonia. — Anita McConnell
[T/I]
biology, of an organism to spread to and develop in a new area or habitat //… usually the first plant to colonize newly formed sand spits and newly deposited sands on the barrier islands … — Robert H. Mohlenbrock
medical, of a microorganism to multiply in or on a host or an inanimate object or surface //C. diff. is a spore-forming, toxin-producing bacterium that can
class='d_link'>colony //areas colonized by European powers //It [Aléria, France] was, at different times in history, colonized by the Greeks, Etruscans, Carthaginians, and Romans. — Kristina Killgrove //Pacific Islanders—Hawaiians, Samoans, the Chamorro of Guam—were and remain colonized by the United States … — Viet Thanh Nguyen //Before the U.S.'s occupation of the roughly 7,500 islands, Spain colonized the Philippines and Mexico concurrently for around 300 years … — Amanda Albee //As the indigenous people of North America, Native Americans were colonized on their own land, the places to which they trace their social, cultural, and religious origins. — Kate A. Berry et al. //Portuguese officials are keenly aware of their checkered legacy. They were the first Europeans to colonize in Asia … — Mark Landler
[T] to migrate to and settle in (an inhabited or uninhabited area) to establish a colony in //the areas of New England colonized by the Puritans //… the seaside town of Puerto Madryn, named by the Welsh settlers who colonized the few river valleys of Patagonia. — Anita McConnell
[T/I]
biology, of an organism to spread to and develop in a new area or habitat //… usually the first plant to colonize newly formed sand spits and newly deposited sands on the barrier islands … — Robert H. Mohlenbrock
medical, of a microorganism to multiply in or on a host or an inanimate object or surface //C. diff. is a spore-forming, toxin-producing bacterium that can