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Definition of Commixture
1. Noun. The act of mixing together. "The mixing of sound channels in the recording studio"
Generic synonyms: Combination, Combining, Compounding
Derivative terms: Admix, Commix, Intermix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix
Definition of Commixture
1. n. The act or process of mixing; the state of being mingled; the blending of ingredients in one mass or compound.
Definition of Commixture
1. Noun. The act or state of being mixed together; a union or mingling of constituents. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Commixture
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Commixture
Literary usage of Commixture
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Works of Francis Bacon by Francis Bacon (1824)
"Certain experiments of the Lord BACON'S, about the commixture of liquors only,
not solids, without heat or agitation, but only by simple composition and ..."
2. Notitia Eucharistica: A Commentary, Explanatory, Doctrinal, and Historical by William Edward Scudamore (1876)
"The commixture. We have already mentioned the ... or commixture. It is not
primitive, but must have spread at an early period, though with great variety of ..."
3. Report of the Annual Meeting (1864)
"On the commixture of the Races of Man, as affecting the Progress of Civilization
in Eastern Asia and the Malay and Polynesian Islands. ..."
4. The Anthropological Review by Anthropological Society of London (1863)
"J. CRAWFURD, Esq., FRS, On the commixture of the Races of Man as affecting the
Progress of Civilization.—It was not until the discovery of a new world that ..."
5. Lectures on the diseases of the nervous system by Jean Martin Charcot (1879)
"Impeded utterance. Vertigo. State of the inferior extremities. Paresis. Remissions.
Absence of disorders of sensibility. commixture of rare symptoms; ..."
6. The Spirit of the Hebrew Poetry by Isaac Taylor, William Adams (1862)
"commixture OF THE DIVINE AND THE HUMAN ELEMENTS IN THE HEBREW POETIC SCRIPTURES.
THE MERE use of any such phrase as this — The Hebrew Poetry, ..."