| ADJUDICATE | • adjudicate v. To settle a legal case or other dispute. • adjudicate v. To act as a judge. • adjudicate v. (Scotland, law) To seize, or convey, a debtor’s estate as security. |
| ADJUNCTION | • adjunction n. The act of joining; the thing joined or added. • adjunction n. (Law) The joining of personal property owned by one to that owned by another. • adjunction n. (Category theory) Given a pair of categories 𝓒 and 𝓓: an anti-parallel pair of functors 𝐹:𝓒→𝓓 and 𝐺:𝓓→𝓒… |
| ADJUNCTIVE | • adjunctive adj. Forming an adjunct. • adjunctive adj. Additional; neither basic nor primary. • adjunctive adj. (Logic) the property of two operations x and y, such that ax(ayb) = a, and ay(axb) = a. |
| COADJUTANT | • coadjutant adj. Mutually assisting or operating; helping. • coadjutant n. An assistant. • COADJUTANT adj. mutually assisting or operating; helping. |
| COADJUTORS | • coadjutors n. Plural of coadjutor. • COADJUTOR n. a bishop assisting a diocesan bishop and having the right of succession. |
| COADJUTRIX | • coadjutrix n. A female coadjutor. • coadjutrix n. An assistant (and eventual successor) to an abbess. • co-adjutrix n. Alternative spelling of coadjutrix. |
| CONJUGATED | • conjugated adj. Joined together in pairs. • conjugated adj. (Organic chemistry, of an organic compound or part of such a compound) Containing one or more pairs… • conjugated v. Simple past tense and past participle of conjugate. |
| DIJUDICATE | • dijudicate v. To make a judicial decision; to decide; to determine. • DIJUDICATE v. to judge, to decide. |
| EJACULATED | • ejaculated v. Simple past tense and past participle of ejaculate. • EJACULATE v. to exclaim, to eject. |
| JUDICATION | • judication n. The act of judging, judgment. • JUDICATION n. judgment. |
| JUDICATIVE | • judicative adj. Having power to judge; judicial. • JUDICATIVE adj. having power to judge; as, the judicative faculty. |
| JUDICATORS | • judicators n. Plural of judicator. • JUDICATOR n. a person who judges. |
| JUDICATORY | • judicatory adj. Pertaining to judgement, or to passing a sentence. • judicatory adj. By which a judgement can be made; decisive, critical. • judicatory n. (Chiefly in Scotland) A court or tribunal. |
| JUDICATURE | • judicature n. The administration of justice by judges and courts; judicial process. • judicature n. The office or authority of a judge; jurisdiction. • judicature n. Judges collectively; a court or group of courts; the judiciary. |
| UNADJACENT | • unadjacent adj. Not adjacent. |