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Definition of Succession
1. Noun. A following of one thing after another in time. "The doctor saw a sequence of patients"
Generic synonyms: Temporal Arrangement, Temporal Order
Specialized synonyms: Pelting, Rain, Rotation, Row, Run
Derivative terms: Sequence, Sequence, Sequential, Succeed, Successive
2. Noun. A group of people or things arranged or following in order. "A succession of failures"
3. Noun. The action of following in order. "He played the trumps in sequence"
Specialized synonyms: Chess Opening, Opening, Alternation
Generic synonyms: Order, Ordering
Derivative terms: Sequence, Sequential, Succeed
4. Noun. (ecology) the gradual and orderly process of change in an ecosystem brought about by the progressive replacement of one community by another until a stable climax is established.
Category relationships: Bionomics, Ecology, Environmental Science
Generic synonyms: Action, Activity, Natural Action, Natural Process
5. Noun. Acquisition of property by descent or by will.
Definition of Succession
1. n. The act of succeeding, or following after; a following of things in order of time or place, or a series of things so following; sequence; as, a succession of good crops; a succession of disasters.
Definition of Succession
1. Noun. An act of following in sequence. ¹
2. Noun. A sequence of things in order. ¹
3. Noun. A passing of royal powers. ¹
4. Noun. A group of rocks or strata that succeed one another in chronological order. ¹
5. Noun. (rfm-sense) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Succession
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Succession
Literary usage of Succession
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Treatise of Human Nature: Being an Attempt to Introduce the Experimental by David Hume (1890)
"He adopted it from ordinary language without considering how it affected his view
of the world as a succession of feelings. That still remained to him a ..."
2. A Treatise on Human Nature: Being an Attempt to Introduce the Experimental by David Hume, Thomas Hill Green, Thomas Hodge Grose (1882)
"Endless succession of feelings is not immortality in true sense. world first
exists and then is thought of—to have seen that it only really exists as ..."
3. The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin (1909)
"CHAPTER XI ON THE GEOLOGICAL Succession OF ORGANIC BEINGS On the slow and successive
appearance of new species—On their different rates of change—Species ..."
4. The Cambridge Modern History by John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton Acton, Adolphus William Ward, George Walter Prothero, Ernest Alfred Benians (1909)
"... GEORGE I () THE HANOVERIAN Succession HAPPILY for England, the Hanoverian
Succession was, so far as the predominant partner in the Union was concerned, ..."
5. The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin (1909)
"CHAPTER XI ON THE GEOLOGICAL Succession OF ORGANIC BEINGS On the slow and successive
appearance of new species—On their different rates of change—Species ..."
6. On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection by Charles Darwin (1878)
"CHAPTER XL ON THE GEOLOGICAL Succession OF ORGANIC BEINGS. On the slow and
successive appearance of new species — On their ..."
7. Geology by Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin, Rollin D. Salisbury (1904)
"The general order of life succession determined by stratigraphy. ... By continued
and close studies, the particulars of the succession were worked out more ..."