Imitate

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Possible Answers:

APE.

Last seen on: –The New Yorker Monday, January 16, 2023 Crossword Answers
L.A. Times Daily Crossword – Jun 6 2022
NY Times Crossword 23 May 22, Monday
USA Today Crossword – Feb 16 2022
Universal Crossword – Jan 30 2022
The Telegraph – QUICK CROSSWORD NO: 29,842 – Nov 25 2021
The Telegraph – QUICK CROSSWORD NO: 29,496 – Oct 16 2020
Universal Crossword – Sep 23 2020
Newsday.com Crossword – Sep 23 2020
Universal Crossword – Apr 30 2020

Random information on the term “Imitate”:

Appropriation in sociology is, according to James J. Sosnoski, “the assimilation of concepts into a governing framework…[the] arrogation, confiscation, [or] seizure of concepts.” According to Tracy B Strong it contains the Latin root proprius, which, “carries the connotations not only of property, but also of proper, stable, assured and indeed of common or ordinary.” He elaborates: “I have appropriated something when I have made it mine, in a manner that I feel comfortable with, that is in a manner to which the challenges of others will carry little or no significance. A text, we might then say, is appropriated when its reader does not find himself or herself called into question by it, but does find him or herself associated with it. A text is successfully appropriated insofar as the appropriator no longer is troubled with it; it has become a part of his or her understanding, and it is recognized by others as ‘owned,’ not openly available for interpretation.” According to Gloria Anzaldúa, “the difference between appropriation and proliferation is that the first steals and harms; the second helps heal breaches of knowledge.”

Imitate on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “APE”:

Alocasia macrorrhizos is a species of flowering plant in the arum family (Araceae) that it is native to rainforests from Borneo to Queensland and has long been cultivated on many Pacific islands and elsewhere in the tropics. Common names include giant taro, ʻape, giant alocasia and pai. In Australia it is known as the cunjevoi (a term which also refers to a marine animal).

The giant taro was originally domesticated in the Philippines, but are known from wild specimens to early Austronesians in Taiwan. From the Philippines, they spread outwards to the rest of Island Southeast Asia and eastward to Oceania where it became one of the staple crops of Pacific Islanders. They are one of the four main species of aroids (taros) cultivated by Austronesians primarily as a source of starch, the others being Amorphophallus paeoniifolius, Colocasia esculenta, and Cyrtosperma merkusii, each with multiple cultivated varieties. Their leaves and stems are also edible if cooked thoroughly, though this is rarely done for giant taro as it contains higher amounts of raphides which cause itching.

APE on Wikipedia