From involve + -ment.
involvement (usually uncountable, plural involvements)
- The act of involving, or the state of being involved.
1988 July 8, Jonathan Rosenbaum, “Portfolio Without Artist”, in Chicago Reader[1]:His colorful life span might be regarded as the story of an adventurer rather than that of an artist; despite his lengthy involvements in many of the arts--painting, fiction, theater, and film--one often feels from his autobiography that it was the adventures that counted most for him.
the act of involving or state of being involved
- Bulgarian: заме́сеност (bg) f (zamésenost), уча́стие (bg) n (učástie)
- Dutch: betrokkenheid (nl) f
- Finnish: osallistuminen (fi)
- French: implication (fr) f
- German: Betroffenheit (de) f
- Greek: ανάμειξη (el) f (anámeixi), συμμετοχή (el) f (symmetochí)
- Ancient: μετοχή (metokhḗ)
- Hungarian: (state) érintettség (hu), bevonódás, belekeveredés (hu), közreműködés (hu), részvétel (hu), szerepvállalás (hu), (act) bevonás (hu), belekeverés (hu)
- Italian: coinvolgimento (it)
- Malayalam: ഉൾപ്പെടൽ (uḷppeṭal), ഇടപെടൽ (ml) (iṭapeṭal)
- Polish: zaangażowanie (pl) n
- Portuguese: envolvimento (pt) m
- Russian: прича́стность (ru) f (pričástnostʹ), уча́стие (ru) n (učástije) (participation), заме́шанность (ru) f (zaméšannostʹ)
- Spanish: involucramiento (es) m, involucración (es) f
- Swedish: involvering c
- Ukrainian: у́часть f (účastʹ, literally “participation”), приче́тність f (pryčétnistʹ) (being involved), залу́чення n (zalúčennja) (act of involving)
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