Accidence
1accidence — ⇒ACCIDENCE, subst. fém. PHILOS. ,,Qualité, état, possibilité d être de l accident. (Ac. Compl. 1842) : • Le monde n est qu un phénomène et point une réalité en soi... Accidence, substance, causalité ne sont que des formes subjectives de notre… …
2Accidence — Ac ci*dence, n. [A corruption of Eng. accidents, pl. of accident. See {Accident}, 2.] 1. The accidents, of inflections of words; the rudiments of grammar. Milton. [1913 Webster] 2. The rudiments of any subject. Lowell. [1913 Webster] …
3accidence — (n.) late 14c., in philosophy, non essential or incidental characteristic, also part of grammar dealing with inflection (mid 15c.), in some cases a misspelling of accidents, or else directly from L. accidentia (used as a term in grammar by… …
4accidence — [ak′sə dəns] n. [ME accidens, inflection < L accidentia, that which happens < accidens: see ACCIDENT] 1. the part of grammar that deals with the inflection of words 2. the elementary or first parts of a subject; rudiments …
5accidence — noun Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French, from Latin accidentia inflections of words, nonessential qualities, plural of accident , accidens, noun Date: 15th century a part of grammar that deals with inflections …
6accidence — См. flessione …
7accidence — /ak si deuhns/, n. 1. the rudiments or essentials of a subject. 2. Gram. a. the study of inflection as a grammatical device. b. the inflections so studied. [1500 1510; < L accidentia, neut. pl. of ACCIDENS (prp. of accidere to fall, befall). See… …
8accidence — noun /ˈæksɪdəns/ a) The accidents, of inflections of words; the rudiments of grammar b) a book containing the first principles of grammar, and so of the rudiments of any subject or art See Also: accident …
9accidence — (a ksi dan s ) s. f. Terme de philosophie. Qualité, état, possibilité d être de l accident. ÉTYMOLOGIE Accidentia, de accidens, accident …
10accidence — grammar book; science of inflections in grammar Sciences and Studies …