conjoining
91coalition — I noun affiliation, alliance, amalgamation, association, binding, bond, cartel, combination, combine, coming together, community, concurrence, confluence, conglomerate, congress, conjoining, conjunctio, conjunction, conjuncture, connection,… …
92conjunction — I noun adjacency, agreement, alliance, association, compliance, concatenation, concert, concomitance, concord, concurrence, concurrent opinion, conformity, conjoining, connection, cooperation, harmony, joint effort, junction, network, union,… …
93immediate — I (at once) adjective flash, instant, instantaneous, praesens, prompt, quick, speedy, sudden, unhesitating, with reasonable dispatch, without delay II (imminent) adjective about to happen, anticipated, approaching, at hand, close, close a …
94Plato: metaphysics and epistemology — Robert Heinaman METAPHYSICS The Theory of Forms Generality is the problematic feature of the world that led to the development of Plato’s Theory of Forms and the epistemological views associated with it.1 This pervasive fact of generality appears …
95Descartes: metaphysics and the philosophy of mind — John Cottingham THE CARTESIAN PROJECT Descartes is rightly regarded as one of the inaugurators of the modern age, and there is no doubt that his thought profoundly altered the course of Western philosophy. In no area has this influence been more… …
96Kant’s moral and political philosophy — Don Becker Practical philosophy, for Kant, is concerned with how one ought to act. His first important work in practical philosophy, Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals, provides Kant’s argument for the fundamental principle of how one ought …
97Banister — Derived from the Old Norman French banestre , itself a development based upon a conjoining of the Gallic benna and the Greek kanastron , the surname is a metonymic job description of a maker of baskets . The carpentry term bannister as meaning a… …
98Bannester — Derived from the Old Norman French banestre , itself a development based upon a conjoining of the Gallic benna and the Greek kanastron , the surname is a metonymic job description of a maker of baskets . The carpentry term bannister as meaning a… …
99Bannister — Derived from the Old Norman French banestre , itself a development based upon a conjoining of the Gallic benna and the Greek kanastron , the surname is a metonymic job description of a maker of baskets . The carpentry term bannister as meaning a… …
100Dearle-Palser — The development of double barrelled surnames is usually recent (post circa 1750), although the origin may be described as Olde English. The desire for personal identification is obvious, however, the raison d etre is more practical, love (and… …