| ASSIMILATE | • assimilate v. (Transitive) To incorporate nutrients into the body, especially after digestion. • assimilate v. (Transitive) To incorporate or absorb (knowledge) into the mind. • assimilate v. (Transitive) To absorb (a person or people) into a community or culture. |
| CONSIMILAR | • consimilar adj. Having similarities in common. • CONSIMILAR adj. like each other. |
| DISSIMILAR | • dissimilar adj. Not similar; unalike; different. • DISSIMILAR adj. unlike. • DISSIMILAR n. something not similar. |
| DISSIMILES | • dissimiles n. Plural of dissimile. • DISSIMILE n. a comparison or illustration by contraries. |
| FACSIMILED | • facsimiled v. Simple past tense and past participle of facsimile. • FACSIMILE v. to make a facsimile of. |
| FACSIMILES | • facsimiles n. Plural of facsimile. • fac-similes n. Plural of fac-simile. • FACSIMILE v. to make a facsimile of. |
| SIMILARITY | • similarity n. Closeness of appearance to something else. • similarity n. (Philosophy) The relation of sharing properties. • similarity n. (Mathematics) A transformation that preserves angles and the ratios of distances. |
| SIMILATIVE | • similative adj. Implying or indicating likeness or resemblance. • similative n. (Grammar) A grammatical case expressing similarity. • SIMILATIVE adj. indicating likeness or resemblance. |
| SIMILISING | • similising v. Present participle of similise. • SIMILISE v. to liken, also SIMILIZE. |
| SIMILITUDE | • similitude n. (Uncountable) Similarity or resemblance to something else. • similitude n. (Countable) A way in which two people or things share similitude. • similitude n. (Countable) Someone or something that closely resembles another; a duplicate or twin. |
| SIMILIZING | • similizing v. Present participle of similize. • SIMILIZE v. to liken, also SIMILISE. |
| SIMILLIMUM | • simillimum n. (Homeopathy) A remedy selected because it causes symptoms similar to those that the practitioner wishes to treat. • SIMILLIMUM n. a remedy chosen for the symptoms it emulates. |