| CIRCUMDUCING | • circumducing v. Present participle of circumduce. • CIRCUMDUCE v. (Scots) to declare elapsed, as the time allowed for introducing evidence. |
| DEDUCIBILITY | • deducibility n. The condition of being deducible. • DEDUCIBILITY n. the quality of being deducible. |
| INDUCIBILITY | • inducibility n. (Uncountable) The state of being inducible. • inducibility n. (Countable) The degree to which something is inducible. • INDUCIBILITY n. the state of being inducible. |
| INTRODUCIBLE | • introducible adj. Able to be introduced. • INTRODUCIBLE adj. that can be introduced. |
| NONPRODUCING | • nonproducing adj. Not carrying out production. • NONPRODUCING adj. not productive. |
| OUTPRODUCING | • outproducing v. Present participle of outproduce. • OUTPRODUCE v. to surpass in production. |
| REDUCIBILITY | • reducibility n. The property of being reducible. • REDUCIBILITY n. the state of being reducible. |
| REPRODUCIBLE | • reproducible adj. (Of a measurement, experiment etc) Capable of being reproduced at a different time or place and by different people. • reproducible n. Something that can be reproduced. • REPRODUCIBLE adj. that can be reproduced. |
| REPRODUCIBLY | • reproducibly adv. In a reproducible manner; in a manner that can be copied. • REPRODUCIBLE adv. that can be reproduced. |
| TRADUCIANISM | • traducianism n. (Theology) The doctrine that the soul or spirit is inherited from one or both parents. • TRADUCIANISM n. the theory that the soul is transmitted to a child in the act of generation or concomitantly with its body. |
| TRADUCIANIST | • traducianist n. One who subscribes to the religious theory of traducianism. • TRADUCIANIST n. a believer in traducianism. |