emulate
verb [ T ]
to copy something achieved by someone else and try to do it as well as they have:
They hope to emulate the success of other software companies.
Fitzgerald is eager to emulate Martin's record of three successive world titles.
emulate
to copy someone’s behavior or try to be like someone else because you admire or respect that person:
Officials are looking to emulate successful ideas from other cities.
He just wants to emulate his dad.
emulate
Here, the above discussed enforcing of transitions is used to emulate the "exchange of tokens" which can take place in the bisimulation game.
This module format, emulated by other composers, lent itself well to looping.
The students concentrated on emulating the real sounds of the elements.
These states could then have become a model that others emulated, until, eventually, the party spread nationwide.
Others, perhaps inspired by his example, sought to emulate his calling.
Moreover, non-graduates who have never had access to the shared transient nature of student households may still emulate the lifestyle experiences of their graduate peers.
Each one of these operators emulates a corresponding process found in biological evolution.
Surely there are other ways of delivering a compelling experience to a participant other than emulating his/her natural milieu.
Moreover, the robot body is divided into several segments in order to emulate the behaviour of an animal spine.
Score, infinitely pliable, can manipulate and metamorphose, clouding lines of functional demarcation - even emulating source.
It provided a promising model for other estates to emulate.
To accomplish visual control, we created synthetic images that emulate real-world images.
It is worth describing the concepts involved in part because there are by now many small computers capable of emulating its musical methods.
These results have been interpreted in terms of independent unrelated pathway schemes that emulate the theoretically derived multitrack view, although with many fewer tracks.
Perhaps we ought to recognize their moral superiority and aspire to emulate their behaviour, but these attitudes seem to fall short of worship.