self-colonize

verb

Etymology

From self- + colonize.

  1. derived from *kʷel-
  2. derived from colōnia
  3. inherited from colane
  4. suffixed as colonize — “colony + ize
  5. prefixed as self-colonize — “self + colonize

Definitions

  1. To regain power (by indigenous people) after having been under colonial rule by another…

    To regain power (by indigenous people) after having been under colonial rule by another country, typically with the adoption of some of the culture of the former colonizers.

    • Nazi-era Schlager are thus reappropriated as part of the FRG after 1989 and help to self-colonize the previously alien(ated) nation of Germany for the Germans.
    • The legacy of colonialism continues and expands to include those who self-colonize thereby reaffirming Weber's caricatures and uncritical idealisations of Westernisation and law or even to idealisations of Islamic law.
  2. To be introduced into an ecosystem through natural processes, as opposed to deliberate…

    To be introduced into an ecosystem through natural processes, as opposed to deliberate introduction by people.

    • Cordgrass will be planted, not left to self-colonize.
    • If not, expect an abundance of weeds, by which we mean invasive and nonnative species that self- colonize.
    • Similarly, at Fresh Kills, a closed landfill with barely any living soil or biodiversity, the task of the layers is to build a new thick surface over time—an ecologically engineered surface that will self-colonize and grow and adapt.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for self-colonize. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA