interact
to act one upon another: A person's microbiome and immune system may interact in ways that promote inflammation.
to communicate, work, or participate in an activity with someone or something: a boss who seldom interacts with employees; a user interacting with a computer program.
Origin of interact
1Words Nearby interact
Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2024
How to use interact in a sentence
“Never before have we been able to get that kind of information without interacting with the periphery of your body, that you had to voluntarily activate,” says Karen Rommelfanger, a neuroethicist at Emory University in Atlanta.
Can privacy coexist with technology that reads and changes brain activity? | Laura Sanders | February 11, 2021 | Science NewsIn addition, keep your listing updated by sharing fresh content and interacting with customers through Google My Business Messages.
A small business’ step-by-step guide to dominating local search in 2021 | Joseph Dyson | February 10, 2021 | Search Engine WatchTransmission also has important practical consequences for the risks that arise as vaccinated individuals interact with everyone else, whether that’s in public parks, schools, households, or health care facilities.
Covid-19 vaccines are great — but you still need to wear a mask for now | Umair Irfan | February 9, 2021 | VoxInarguably it has impacted the way we live, work, and interact with our socio-economic ecosystem and precipitated a transformation across economies and businesses.
What Amazon and Oracle can teach India Inc about surviving an economic crisis | Ayon Banerjee | February 9, 2021 | QuartzBringing fun to the officeAfter more than a year of lockdown and not physically interacting with colleagues, it is important employees can let their hair down in the office.
How businesses are looking to replicate home-like atmosphere in future office layouts | Jessica Davies | February 4, 2021 | Digiday
But does the project offer a novel way to interact with culture?
But if the goal is to not interact with people, why bother going to a bar in the first place?
An affordance is a feature that offers garden-goers a chance to interact with a garden.
Magical Gardens for the Blind, Deaf, and Disabled | Elizabeth Picciuto | October 22, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTBut in an interview, Susli said she did interact with members of the SEA on social media.
The Kardashian Look-Alike Trolling for Assad | Noah Shachtman, Michael Kennedy | October 17, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTAdvances in communication and social media have changed the way we interact with each other in a number of different ways.
These various hormones or chemical controllers in the blood interact in a nicely balanced chemical system.
Taboo and Genetics | Melvin Moses Knight, Iva Lowther Peters, and Phyllis Mary BlanchardThey open up issues in social psychology, and interact with the enquiries of educational science.
The Outline of History: Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind | Herbert George WellsThey act sometimes separately, and sometimes they interact in conduction with each other, producing their various effects.
Evolution in Modern Thought | Ernst HaeckelBut the magnets come at length sufficiently near each other to enable their poles to interact.
Six Lectures on Light | John TyndallWhy should not a form of conscious life so interact with what would otherwise be dead matter as to 'indwell' it?
Theodicy | G. W. Leibniz
British Dictionary definitions for interact
/ (ˌɪntərˈækt) /
(intr) to act on or in close relation with each other
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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