distinctness

  • 51Oryzomys couesi — Temporal range: Late Pleistocene to Recent Oryzomys couesi (above) and Tylomys panamensis (below).[1] …

    Wikipedia

  • 52Screech owl — Screech owls Eastern Screech Owl, Megascops asio Rufous morph Scientific classification Kingdom …

    Wikipedia

  • 53number form —    The term number form was introduced in or shortly before 1880 by the British scientist Sir Francis Galton (1822 1911) to denote a mental map or configuration of numbers which may appear automatically and involuntarily whenever one thinks of… …

    Dictionary of Hallucinations

  • 54Sceptics (The) — The sceptics Michael Frede INTRODUCTION When we speak of ‘scepticism’ and of ‘sceptics’, we primarily think of a philosophical position according to which nothing is known for certain, or even nothing can be known for certain. There are certain… …

    History of philosophy

  • 55Descartes: metaphysics and the philosophy of mind — John Cottingham THE CARTESIAN PROJECT Descartes is rightly regarded as one of the inaugurators of the modern age, and there is no doubt that his thought profoundly altered the course of Western philosophy. In no area has this influence been more… …

    History of philosophy

  • 56clarity — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. clearness, transparency. See meaning. Ant., obscurity, opacity. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. clearness, lucidity, limpidness, limpidity, purity, brightness, precision, explicitness, exactness,… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 57clearness — I (Roget s IV) n. Syn. brightness, distinctness, lucidity; see clarity . II (Roget s Thesaurus II) noun The quality of being clear and easy to perceive or understand: clarity, distinctness, limpidity, limpidness, lucidity, lucidness, pellucidity …

    English dictionary for students

  • 58distinct — 1 Distinct, separate, several, discrete are comparable when used in reference to two or more things (sometimes persons) and in the sense of not being individually the same. Distinct always implies a capacity for being distinguished by the eye or… …

    New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • 59integrate — integrate, articulate, concatenate are comparable when they mean to bring or join together a number of distinct things so that they move, operate, or function as a unit. The implications of these senses are probably more often found in the… …

    New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • 60ἀκρισία — ἀκρισίᾱ , ἀκρισία want of distinctness and order fem nom/voc/acc dual ἀκρισίᾱ , ἀκρισία want of distinctness and order fem nom/voc sg (attic doric aeolic) …

    Greek morphological index (Ελληνική μορφολογικούς δείκτες)