¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Concatenations
1. concatenation [n] - See also: concatenation
Lexicographical Neighbors of Concatenations
Literary usage of Concatenations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Grammar of the Tamil Language, with an Appendix by Charles Theophilus Ewald Rhenius (1853)
"... some rows. many concatenations, some concatenations. many concatenations, some
concatenations. 2. ..."
2. Collected papers on analytical psychology by Carl Gustav Jung, Constance Ellen Long (1917)
"But such relative truth suffices for the time being, if it serves to explain the
most important actual concatenations of the past, to light up present ..."
3. SAS(R) 9.1.3 Language Reference:: Dictionary, Fifth Edition, Volumes 1-4 by SAS Institute (2006)
"Specify _ALL_ CLEAR to disassociate all currently assigned catref or libref.catref
concatenations. _ALL_ CLEAR disassociates all currently assigned catref ..."
4. The Monadology and Other Philosophical Writings by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Robert Latta (1898)
"The concatenations [of ideas] made by the lower animals are simply like those of
mere empirics, who maintain that what has sometimes happened will happen ..."
5. Vital Lies: Studies of Some Varieties of Recent Obscurantism by Vernon Lee (1912)
"... Rose," are minute studies of the concatenations of ideas, the frequently faulty
concatenations of absurd ideas, out of which, according to Mr Crawley, ..."
6. Magazine of Natural History edited by John Claudius Loudon, Edward Charlesworth, John Denson (1838)
"This view of the relations and concatenations of natural objects has evidently
been produced by a very extended observation of the relations of animals, ..."