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Word Meanings - COMPLEXUS - Book Publishers vocabulary database

A complex; an aggregate of parts; a complication.

Related words: (words related to COMPLEXUS)

  • COMPLEXIONALLY
    Constitutionally. Though corruptible, not complexionally vicious. Burke.
  • COMPLEXUS
    A complex; an aggregate of parts; a complication.
  • COMPLICATION
    A disease or diseases, or adventitious circumstances or conditions, coexistent with and modifying a primary disease, but not necessarily connected with it. (more info) 1. The act or process of complicating; the state of being complicated; intricate
  • COMPLEXIONED
    Having a complexion; -- used in composition; as, a dark- complexioned or a ruddy-complexioned person. A flower is the best-complexioned grass, as a pearl is the best- colored clay. Fuller.
  • COMPLEXEDNESS
    The quality or state of being complex or involved; complication. The complexedness of these moral ideas. Locke.
  • COMPLEXNESS
    The state of being complex; complexity. A. Smith.
  • AGGREGATE
    1. Formed by a collection of particulars into a whole mass or sum; collective. The aggregate testimony of many hundreds. Sir T. Browne. 2. Formed into clusters or groups of lobules; as, aggregate glands. 3. Composed of several florets within
  • AGGREGATELY
    Collectively; in mass.
  • COMPLEXIONARY
    Pertaining to the complexion, or to the care of it. Jer. Taylor.
  • COMPLEXION
    1. The state of being complex; complexity. Though the terms of propositions may be complex, yet . . . it is proprly called a simple syllogism, since the complexion does not belong to the syllogistic form of it. I. Watts. 2. A combination;
  • COMPLEX
    around, comprise; com- + plectere to twist, akin to plicare to fold. 1. Composed of two or more parts; composite; not simple; as, a complex being; a complex idea. Ideas thus made up of several simple ones put together, I call complex;
  • COMPLEXIONAL
    Of or pertaining to constitutional complexion. A moral rather than a complexional timidity. Burke.
  • COMPLEXLY
    In a complex manner; not simply.
  • COMPLEXITY
    1. The state of being complex; intricacy; entanglement. The objects of society are of the greatest possible complexity. Burke. 2. That which is complex; intricacy; complication. Many-corridored complexities Of Arthur's palace. Tennyson.
  • COMPLEXED
    Complex, complicated. "Complexed significations." Sir T. Browne.
  • DISAGGREGATE
    To destroy the aggregation of; to separate into component parts, as an aggregate mass.
  • DISCOMPLEXION
    To change the complexion or hue of. Beau. & Fl.
  • INCOMPLEX
    Not complex; uncompounded; simple. Barrow.
  • DECOMPLEX
    Repeatedly compound; made up of complex constituents.

 

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