- inhesion
- in·he·sion
English syllables. 2014.
English syllables. 2014.
Inhesion — In*he sion, n. [L. inhaesio. See {Inhere}.] The state of existing, of being inherent, in something; inherence. A. Baxter. [1913 Webster] Constant inhesion and habitual abode. South. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
inhesión — (del lat. «inhaesĭo, ōnis») 1 f. *Cariño o adhesión afectiva. 2 *Inherencia. * * * inhesión. (Del lat. inhaesĭo, ōnis). f. Fil. Inherencia de los accidentes a la sustancia. || 2. p. us. apego … Enciclopedia Universal
inhesión — (Del lat. inhaesĭo, ōnis). 1. f. Fil. Inherencia de los accidentes a la sustancia. 2. p. us. apego … Diccionario de la lengua española
inhesion — [in hē′zhən] n. [LL inhaesio < pp. of L inhaerere: see INHERE] Rare INHERENCE … English World dictionary
inhesion — /in hee zheuhn/, n. the state or fact of inhering; inherence. [1625 35; < LL inhaesion (s. of inhaesio), equiv. to L inhaes(us) ptp. of inhaerere to INHERE + ion ION] * * * … Universalium
inhesion — noun inherence (act of inhering) … Wiktionary
inhesion — /ɪnˈhiʒən / (say in heezhuhn) noun the state or fact of inhering; inherence. {Late Latin inhaesio stick fast, cling} …
inhesion — n. formal the act or fact of inhering. Etymology: LL inhaesio (as INHERE) … Useful english dictionary
Accident — • The obvious division of things into the stable and the unstable Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Accident Accident † … Catholic encyclopedia
History of linguistics — Linguistics as a study endeavors to describe and explain the human faculty of language.Historically, linguistic study was motivated by the correct description of a liturgical language, notably that of Sanskrit grammar by IAST|Pāṇini (fl. 4th… … Wikipedia