combination
Etymology
This text is extracted from the Wiktionary and it is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license | Terms and conditions | Privacy policy 0.003
Etymology
From Middle English combinacioun, combynacyoun, from Old French combination, from Late Latin combīnātiō.
Morphologically combine + -ation
Pronunciation Nouncombination
- The act of combining, the state of being combined or the result of combining.
- These guidelines should be followed in combination with those given last week.
- She took a dangerous combination of alcohol and heroin.
- An object formed by combining.
- A sequence of numbers or letters used to open a combination lock.
- The combination to their safe was the date of birth of their first child.
- (mathematics) One or more elements selected from a set without regard to the order of selection.
- An association or alliance of people for some common purpose.
- (billiards) A combination shot; a billiard; a shot where the cue ball hits a ball that strikes another ball on the table.
- A motorcycle and sidecar.
- A rapid sequence of punches or strikes in boxing or other combat sports.
- (antonym(s) of “act of combining”): division, separation
- (antonym(s) of “mathematics”): permutation
- French: combinaison
- German: Kombinieren
- Italian: combinazione
- Portuguese: combinação
- Russian: соедине́ние
- Spanish: combinación
- French: combinaison
- German: Kombination, Kombinierte, Kombinat (unusual)
- Russian: объедине́ние
- French: combinaison
- German: Kombination
- Russian: комбина́ция
- French: combinaison, sélection
- German: Kombination
- Russian: комбина́ция
- French: association, groupement
- German: Vereinigung, Zusammenschluss
- Russian: объедине́ние
- French: side-car
- German: Seitenwagengespann
- German: Kombination
- Portuguese: combinação
- Spanish: combinación
This text is extracted from the Wiktionary and it is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license | Terms and conditions | Privacy policy 0.003
