sufficience
Look at other dictionaries:
Sufficience — Suf*fi cience, n. Sufficiently. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
sufficience — suf·fi·cience … English syllables
sufficience — səˈfishən(t)s noun ( s) Etymology: Middle English, from Late Latin sufficientia archaic : sufficiency … Useful english dictionary
self-sufficience — noun see self sufficiency … Useful english dictionary
Economy of Africa — The economy of Africa consists of the trade, industry, and resources of the peoples of Africa. As of July 2005, approximately 887 million people were living in 54 different states. Africa is the world s poorest inhabited continent. Though parts… … Wikipedia
René de Saussure — (March 17, 1868, Geneva ndash; December 2, 1943, Berne) was a Swiss Esperantist and professional mathematician, who composed important works about Esperanto and interlinguistics from a linguistic viewpoint. His chef d ouevre is an analysis on the … Wikipedia
quorum — quo·rum / kwōr əm/ n [Middle English, a select number of English justices of the peace formerly required to be present at sessions to constitute a lawful bench, from Latin, of whom, genitive plural of qui who; from the wording of the commission… … Law dictionary
sufficiency — noun a) The quality or condition of being sufficient. b) An adequate amount. Syn: sufficience … Wiktionary
sufficiency — late 15c., from L. sufficientia, from sufficiens (see SUFFICIENT (Cf. sufficient)) + CY (Cf. cy). Sufficience is from late 14c … Etymology dictionary
originality — n 1. creativity, creativeness, imagination, imaginativeness, ingenuity, ingeniousness, inventiveness, resourcefulness, initiative; individuality, independence, self reliance, self sufficience, autonomy; divergence, nonimitativeness, unorthodoxy,… … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder