View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Acculturation.

Acculturation

Acculturation meaning

A process by which the culture of a society changes on contact with a different one. | A process by which a person acquires the culture of the society that they inhabit, starting at birth.

Example sentences (14)

But in any case, migrants grow old in a culture that’s not heritage to them, so Australian acculturation is important to help combat social isolation in their old age.

Research has shown that acculturation into a Western country is unlikely for these people.

According to some defectors, religion helps with acculturation.

Additionally, Muscogee descendants of varying degrees of acculturation live throughout the southeastern United States.

Also, the more acculturation there is between cultures, the more influenced the culture is to adopt Caucasians drinking practices.

In fact, it seems to have become less hidden as the process of acculturation sped up, such as in the area of music and dance where mukhannathun were prevalent.

Moreover, the acculturation of aborigines in increased numbers may have intensified the perception of a swell in the number of Han.

Over roughly five centuries, through a complex process of acculturation and mixing seen elsewhere in the Maghreb and North Africa, some of the indigenous Berber tribes mixed with the Maqil Arab tribes and formed a culture unique to Morocco and Mauritania.

The complexity and scope of aboriginal assimilation and acculturation on Taiwan has led to three general narratives of Taiwanese ethnic change.

The condition underlying this alliance was to open the country for Christianization and acculturation from the Byzantine Empire.

The cosmopolitan and multicultural nature of modern Guam poses challenges for Chamorros struggling to preserve their culture and identity amidst forces of acculturation.

They came from regions where civil equality or emancipation were never granted, while acculturation and modernization made little headway.

While traditional Jewish society remained well entrenched in backward Eastern Europe, reports of the rapid acculturation and religious laxity in the West troubled both camps.

With the advent of Jewish emancipation and acculturation in Central Europe during the late 18th Century, and the breakdown of traditional patterns and norms, the response Judaism must offer to the changed circumstances became a heated question.