| COMMONPLACING | • commonplacing v. Present participle of commonplace. • COMMONPLACE v. to put in a commonplace book, a book of truisms. |
| COMPAGINATION | • compagination n. (Obsolete) The union of parts; composite structure. • COMPAGINATION n. the act of compaginating. |
| COMPASSIONING | • compassioning v. Present participle of compassion. • compassioning n. An act of bestowing compassion. • COMPASSION v. (archaic) to pity. |
| DECOMPOUNDING | • decompounding v. Present participle of decompound. • DECOMPOUND v. to decompose, decay. |
| GYNANDROMORPH | • gynandromorph n. An insect, crustacean or bird literally having physical characteristics of both sexes, usually displaying… • gynandromorph n. A person having certain physical characteristics of both sexes. • GYNANDROMORPH n. an animal having both male and female characteristics. |
| IMPIGNORATION | • impignoration n. (Obsolete) The act of pawning or pledging; the state of being pawned. • IMPIGNORATION n. the state of being mortgaged. |
| MONOPHTHONGAL | • monophthongal adj. (Linguistics) Of or pertaining to a monophthong. • monophthongal adj. (Linguistics, of a vowel) Pronounced as a single vowel sound; said especially of a vowel that is also… • MONOPHTHONGAL adj. of or like a monophthong. |
| NONCOMPLYINGS | • NONCOMPLYING n. the failure to comply; noncompliance. |
| NONPERFORMING | • nonperforming adj. Not performing satisfactorily; not functioning well. • nonperforming adj. Not acting as a performer. • NONPERFORMING adj. not producing the expected return. |
| NONPROGRAMMER | • nonprogrammer n. A person who is not a computer programmer. • non-programmer n. Alternative spelling of nonprogrammer. • NONPROGRAMMER n. someone who is not a programmer. |
| PATHOGNOMONIC | • pathognomonic adj. (Medicine, of a sign or symptom) specifically characteristic or indicative of a particular disease or condition. • PATHOGNOMONIC adj. distinctively characteristic of a particular disease. |
| PHENOMENOLOGY | • phenomenology n. (Philosophy) The study of structures of consciousness as experienced from the first-person point of view. • phenomenology n. (Philosophy) A movement based on this, originated about 1905 by Edmund Husserl. • phenomenology n. (Medicine, philosophy of medical sciences) An approach to clinical practice which places undue reliance… |