HYPOSTASIS
\hˌa͡ɪpə͡ʊstˈe͡ɪsɪs], \hˌaɪpəʊstˈeɪsɪs], \h_ˌaɪ_p_əʊ_s_t_ˈeɪ_s_ɪ_s]\
Definitions of HYPOSTASIS
- 2006 - WordNet 3.0
- 2011 - English Dictionary Database
- 2010 - New Age Dictionary Database
- 1913 - Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
- 1898 - Warner's pocket medical dictionary of today.
- 1899 - The american dictionary of the english language.
- 1894 - The Clarendon dictionary
- 1846 - Medical lexicon: a dictionary of medical science
- 1898 - American pocket medical dictionary
- 1916 - Appleton's medical dictionary
- 1871 - The Cabinet Dictionary of the English Language
- 1790 - A Complete Dictionary of the English Language
Sort: Oldest first
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That which forms the basis of anything; underlying principle; a concept or mental entity conceived or treated as an existing being or thing.
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That which is deposited at the bottom of a fluid; sediment.
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Principle; an element; - used by the alchemists in speaking of salt, sulphur, and mercury, which they considered as the three principles of all material bodies.
By Oddity Software
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That which forms the basis of anything; underlying principle; a concept or mental entity conceived or treated as an existing being or thing.
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That which is deposited at the bottom of a fluid; sediment.
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Principle; an element; - used by the alchemists in speaking of salt, sulphur, and mercury, which they considered as the three principles of all material bodies.
By Noah Webster.
By William R. Warner
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A substance: the essence or personality of the three divisions of the Godhead.
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HYPOSTATIC, HYPOSTATICAL.
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HYPOSTATICALLY.
By Daniel Lyons
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Hypestatic.
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Substance, as distinguished from appearance.
By William Hand Browne, Samuel Stehman Haldeman
By Robley Dunglison
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Deposit or sediment.
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Formation of a deposit; especially a settling of blood from feeble blood-current.
By Willam Alexander Newman Dorland
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Of Hippocrates, a suppression of morbid humors (from escape at the surface); an abscess.
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A sediment.
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A morbid deposit in any part of the body.
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Venous hyperemia due chiefly to the action of gravity.
By Smith Ely Jelliffe
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