Rather, the superposition state embodies both the 0 and 1 states simultaneously.
From the newscientist.com
He is the head of state and embodies the collective will of the American people.
From the washingtontimes.com
It was the kind of win that embodies why this Phillies team is so tough to beat.
From the washingtontimes.com
Yet Big Horn also embodies another trend in America's alternative energy sector.
From the businessweek.com
I feel his stage persona embodies and plays to my favourite British stereotypes.
From the guardian.co.uk
Lupine embodies the first trophic level, which brings life through revegetation.
From the sciencedaily.com
No one more embodies this shift than the Mexican President, Vicente Fox Quesada.
From the time.com
For many French, no other institution so embodies their civilization as le zinc.
From the time.com
In some ways, the Rolla campus embodies the entire University of Missouri system.
From the stltoday.com
More examples
Incarnate: represent in bodily form; "He embodies all that is evil wrong with the system"; "The painting substantiates the feelings of the artist"
Represent, as of a character on stage; "Derek Jacobi was Hamlet"
(embodied) bodied: possessing or existing in bodily form; "what seemed corporal melted as breath into the wind"- Shakespeare; "an incarnate spirit"; "`corporate' is an archaic term"
To represent in a physical form; to incarnate or personify; To include or represent, especially as part of a cohesive whole
(1. (Conceptual) Embodied) Conceptual embodiment builds on human perceptions and actions developing mental images that are verbalized in increasingly sophisticated ways and become perfect mental entities in our imagination.
(Embodied) cultural capital consists of both the consciously acquired and the passively "inherited" properties of one's self (with "inherit[ance]" here used not in the genetic sense but in the sense of receipt over time, usually from the family through socialization, of culture and traditions). ...
To make concrete by expression in perceptible form as in words, acts, institutions, or works of art.