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Meaning of ஒத்திசைவு in English

  • The quality of being assimilable.
  • Tending to, or characterized by, assimilation; that assimilates or causes assimilation; as, an assimilative process or substance.
  • Resemblance of sound.
  • A peculiar species of rhyme, in which the last acce`ted vow`l and tnose whioh follow it in one word correspond in sound with the vowels of another word, while the consonants of the two words are unlike in sound; as, calamo and platano, baby and chary.
  • Incomplete correspondence.
  • The act or state of growing together, as similar parts; the act of uniting by natural affinity or attraction; the state of being united; union; concretion.
  • A female heir who inherits with other heiresses; a joint heiress.
  • The state of being a coheir.
  • A joint herald.
  • A sticking or cleaving together; union of parts of the same body; cohesion.
  • Connection or dependence, proceeding from the subordination of the parts of a thing to one principle or purpose, as in the parts of a discourse, or of a system of philosophy; consecutiveness.
  • of Cohere
  • The state of being cohesible.
  • The act or state of sticking together; close union.
  • That from of attraction by which the particles of a body are united throughout the mass, whether like or unlike; -- distinguished from adhesion, which unites bodies by their adjacent surfaces.
  • Logical agreement and dependence; as, the cohesion of ideas.
  • Hindrance; restraint.
  • To arch over; to vault.
  • To divide into chambers or cells.
  • An arch or vault.
  • A chamber of a multilocular shell.
  • Hollowness; concavity.
  • The use of concetti or affected conceits.
  • Pertaining to, or connected with, conchology.
  • The science of Mollusca, and of the shells which they form; malacology.
  • The art of measuring shells or their curves; conchyliometry.
  • To place fitly together; to adapt; to clear.
  • Internal harmony or fitness; mutual adaptation of parts; elegance; -- used chiefly of style of discourse.
  • Of or pertaining to preaching or public addresses.
  • Of the same color; of uniform color.
  • Of the same color throughout.
  • A state of agreement; harmony; union.
  • Agreement by stipulation; compact; covenant; treaty or league.
  • Agreement of words with one another, in gender, number, person, or case.
  • An agreement between the parties to a fine of land in reference to the manner in which it should pass, being an acknowledgment that the land in question belonged to the complainant. See Fine.
  • An agreeable combination of tones simultaneously heard; a consonant chord; consonance; harmony.
  • A variety of American grape, with large dark blue (almost black) grapes in compact clusters.
  • To agree; to act together.
  • Agreement; accordance.
  • Concord; agreement.
  • An alphabetical verbal index showing the places in the text of a book where each principal word may be found, with its immediate context in each place.
  • A topical index or orderly analysis of the contents of a book.
  • Agreeing; correspondent; harmonious; consonant.
  • Agreement.
  • Coalescence of particles; growth; increase by the addition of particles.
  • The act of burning different things together.
  • The quality of being concrete.
  • Concretionary.
  • The process of concreting; the process of uniting or of becoming united, as particles of matter into a mass; solidification.
  • A mass or nodule of solid matter formed by growing together, by congelation, condensation, coagulation, induration, etc.; a clot; a lump; a calculus.
  • A rounded mass or nodule produced by an aggregation of the material around a center; as, the calcareous concretions common in beds of clay.
  • Pertaining to, or formed by, concretion or aggregation; producing or containing concretions.
  • Sexual lust; morbid carnal passion.
  • To run together; to meet.
  • To meet in the same point; to combine or conjoin; to contribute or help toward a common object or effect.
  • To unite or agree (in action or opinion); to join; to act jointly; to agree; to coincide; to correspond.
  • To assent; to consent.
  • The act of concurring; a meeting or coming together; union; conjunction; combination.
  • A meeting of minds; agreement in opinion; union in design or act; -- implying joint approbation.
  • Agreement or consent, implying aid or contribution of power or influence; cooperation.
  • A common right; coincidence of equal powers; as, a concurrence of jurisdiction in two different courts.
  • Concurrence.
  • Want of conformity or correspondence; inconsistency; disagreement.
  • The state of being disconsolate.
  • of Disjoint
  • A mingling of discordant sounds; an inharmonious combination of sounds; discord.
  • Want of agreement; incongruity.
  • The act of harmonizing.
  • Confirmation or ratification (as of something otherwise null and void), by a court or a grantor.
  • Want of concinnity or congruousness; unsuitableness.
  • Want of coordination; lack of harmonious adjustment or action.
  • of Intonate
  • A thundering; thunder.
  • The act of sounding the tones of the musical scale.
  • Singing or playing in good tune or otherwise; as, her intonation was false.
  • Reciting in a musical prolonged tone; intonating, or singing of the opening phrase of a plain-chant, psalm, or canticle by a single voice, as of a priest. See Intone, v. t.
  • A second seizure; the act of seizing again.
  • The character or characteristic of a sycophant.
  • False accusation; calumniation; talebearing.
  • Obsequious flattery; servility.
  • A prefix meaning with, along with, together, at the same time. Syn- becomes sym- before p, b, and m, and syl- before l.
  • Alt. of Synacmy
  • Imposing reciprocal obligations upon the parties; as, a synallagmatic contract.
  • Having the stamens united by their anthers; as, synantherous flowers.
  • The simultaneous maturity of the anthers and stigmas of a blossom.
  • A variety of sugar, isomeric with sucrose, found in the tubers of the Jerusalem artichoke (Helianthus tuberosus), in the dahlia, and other Compositae.
  • Joint rule or sovereignity.
  • A fastening or knitting together; the state of being closely jointed; close union.
  • of Synarthrosis
  • Concurrence of starry position or influence; hence, similarity of condition, fortune, etc., as prefigured by astrological calculation.
  • Composed of several carpels consolidated into one ovary.
  • Not capable of being used as a term by itself; -- said of words, as an adverb or preposition.
  • An immovable articulation in which the union is formed by cartilage.
  • Symphyseotomy.
  • A concession made for the purpose of retorting with greater force.
  • Happening at, or belonging to, the same time; synchronous; simultaneous.
  • A synchronal thing or event.
  • Happening at the same time; synchronous.
  • The concurrence of events in time; simultaneousness.
  • The tabular arrangement of historical events and personages, according to their dates.
  • A representation, in the same picture, of two or events which occured at different times.
  • Of or pertaining to synchronism; arranged according to correspondence in time; as, synchronistic tables.
  • The act of synchronizing; concurrence of events in respect to time.
  • Contemporaneous chronology.
  • Happening at the same time; simultaneous.
  • The concurrence of events in time; synchronism.
  • A derangement or confusion of any kind, as of words in a sentence, or of humors in the eye.
  • Curved toward the same side in all directions; -- said of surfaces which in all directions around any point bend away from a tangent plane toward the same side, as the surface of a sphere; -- opposed to anticlastic.
  • Inclined downward from opposite directions, so as to meet in a common point or line.
  • Formed by strata dipping toward a common line or plane; as, a synclinal trough or valley; a synclinal fold; -- opposed to anticlinal.
  • A synclinal fold.
  • Synclinal.
  • A mountain range owing its origin to the progress of a geosynclinal, and ending in a catastrophe of displacement and upturning.
  • Of or pertaining to syncope; resembling syncope.
  • To contract, as a word, by taking one or more letters or syllables from the middle; as, "Gloster" is a syncopated form of "Gloucester."
  • To commence, as a tone, on an unaccented part of a measure, and continue it into the following accented part, so that the accent is driven back upon the weak part and the rhythm drags.
  • of Syncopate
  • The act of syncopating; the contraction of a word by taking one or more letters or syllables from the middle; syncope.
  • The act of syncopating; a peculiar figure of rhythm, or rhythmical alteration, which consists in welding into one tone the second half of one beat with the first half of the beat which follows.
  • An elision or retrenchment of one or more letters or syllables from the middle of a word; as, ne'er for never, ev'ry for every.
  • Same as Syncopation.
  • A fainting, or swooning. See Fainting.
  • A pause or cessation; suspension.
  • One who syncopates.
  • Uniting and blending together different systems, as of philosophy, morals, or religion.
  • Attempted union of principles or parties irreconcilably at variance with each other.
  • One who attempts to unite principles or parties which are irreconcilably at variance;
  • an adherent of George Calixtus and other Germans of the seventeenth century, who sought to unite or reconcile the Protestant sects with each other and with the Roman Catholics, and thus occasioned a long and violent controversy in the Lutheran church.
  • Pertaining to, or characterized by, syncretism; as, a syncretistic mixture of the service of Jehovah and the worship of idols.
  • Of or pertaining to Syncretists.
  • A figure of speech in which opposite things or persons are compared.
  • Tissue in which the cell or partition walls are wholly wanting and the cell bodies fused together, so that the tissue consists of a continuous mass of protoplasm in which nuclei are imbedded, as in ordinary striped muscle.
  • The ectoderm of a sponge.
  • A contraction of two syllables into one; synizesis.
  • A Linnaean class of plants in which the stamens are united by the anthers.
  • Alt. of Syngenesious
  • A theory of generation in which each germ is supposed to contain the germs of all subsequent generations; -- the opposite of epigenesis.
  • Having the stamens united by the anthers; of or pertaining to the Syngenesia.
  • A writing signed by both or all the parties to a contract or bond.
  • An obliteration of the pupil of the eye.
  • A contraction of two syllables into one; synecphonesis.
  • A dictionary of synonyms.
  • of Synonymize
  • Having the two main flexor tendons of the toes blended together.
  • Having united sepals; gamosepalous.
  • The state of being unconcerned, or of having no share or concern; unconcernedness.
  • Want of conformity; incongruity; inconsistency.
  • Want of parallelism between strata in contact.

Meaning of ஒத்திசைவு in English

English usage of ஒத்திசைவு

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