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correspondence
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The Salt of the World?
- Correspondence - n. - Friendly intercourse; reciprocal exchange of civilities; especially, intercourse between persons by means of letters.
- Correspondence - n. - The letters which pass between correspondents.
- Correspondence - n. - Mutual adaptation, relation, or agreement, of one thing to another; agreement; congruity; fitness; relation.
- Swedenborgian - n. - One who holds the doctrines of the New Jerusalem church, as taught by Emanuel Swedenborg, a Swedish philosopher and religious writer, who was born a. d. 1688 and died 1772. Swedenborg claimed to have intercourse with the spiritual world, through the opening of his spiritual senses in 1745. He taught that the Lord Jesus Christ, as comprehending in himself all the fullness of the Godhead, is the one only God, and that there is a spiritual sense to the Scriptures, which he (Swedenborg) was able to reveal, because he saw the correspondence between natural and spiritual things.
- Coincidence - n. - Exact correspondence in nature, character, result, circumstances, etc.; concurrence; agreement.
- Analogy - n. - A relation or correspondence in function, between organs or parts which are decidedly different.
- Truth - n. - Conformity to rule; exactness; close correspondence with an example, mood, object of imitation, or the like.
- Register - n. - The correspondence of pages, columns, or lines on the opposite or reverse sides of the sheet.
- Synchronistic - a. - Of or pertaining to synchronism; arranged according to correspondence in time; as, synchronistic tables.
- Register - n. - The correspondence or adjustment of the several impressions in a design which is printed in parts, as in chromolithographic printing, or in the manufacture of paper hangings. See Register, v. i. 2.
- Jingle - n. - A correspondence of sound in rhymes, especially when the verse has little merit; hence, the verse itself.
- Homology - n. - The correspondence or resemblance of substances belonging to the same type or series; a similarity of composition varying by a small, regular difference, and usually attended by a regular variation in physical properties; as, there is an homology between methane, CH4, ethane, C2H6, propane, C3H8, etc., all members of the paraffin series. In an extended sense, the term is applied to the relation between chemical elements of the same group; as, chlorine, bromine, and iodine are said to be in homology with each other. Cf. Heterology.
- Keeping - n. - Harmony or correspondence between the different parts of a work of art; as, the foreground of this painting is not in keeping.
- Chime - n. - To make a rude correspondence of sounds; to jingle, as in rhyming.
- Aid-de-camp - n. - An officer selected by a general to carry orders, also to assist or represent him in correspondence and in directing movements.
- Homogeny - n. - The correspondence of common descent; -- a term used to supersede homology by Lankester, who also used homoplasy to denote any superinduced correspondence of position and structure in parts embryonically distinct (other writers using the term homoplasmy). Thus, there is homogeny between the fore limb of a mammal and the wing of a bird; but the right and left ventricles of the heart in both are only in homoplasy with each other, these having arisen independently since the divergence of both groups from a univentricular ancestor.
- Accord - v. t. - Agreement, harmony, or just correspondence of things; as, the accord of light and shade in painting.
- Intermembral - a. - Between members or limbs; as, intermembral homology, the correspondence of the limbs with each other.
- Chime - n. - Pleasing correspondence of proportion, relation, or sound.
- Integrity - n. - Unimpaired, unadulterated, or genuine state; entire correspondence with an original condition; purity.
- Intercourse - n. - A commingling; intimate connection or dealings between persons or nations, as in common affairs and civilities, in correspondence or trade; communication; commerce; especially, interchange of thought and feeling; association; communion.
- Nick - v. t. - To suit or fit into, as by a correspondence of nicks; to tally with.
- Accommodate - v. t. - To show the correspondence of; to apply or make suit by analogy; to adapt or fit, as teachings to accidental circumstances, statements to facts, etc.; as, to accommodate prophecy to events.
- Agreement - n. - Concord or correspondence of one word with another in gender, number, case, or person.
- Countretaille - n. - A counter tally; correspondence (in sound).
- Rhyme - n. - Verses, usually two, having this correspondence with each other; a couplet; a poem containing rhymes.
strongscsv:description
- G473 ἀντί - 473 ἀντί - ἈΝΤΊ - - antí - an-tee' - a primary particle; opposite, i.e. instead or because of (rarely in addition to):--for, in the room of. Often used in composition to denote contrast, requital, substitution, correspondence, etc. - Preposition - greek
- G489 ἀντιμισθία - 489 ἀντιμισθία - ἈΝΤΙΜΙΣΘΊΑ - - antimisthía - an-tee-mis-thee'-ah - from a compound of ἀντί and μισθός; requital, correspondence:--recompense. - Noun Feminine - greek
- H3729 כְּפַת - 3729 כְּפַת - כְּפַת - - kᵉphath - kef-ath' - (Aramaic) a root of uncertain correspondence; to fetter; bind. - Verb - arc