2. Adjective. (context: not obsolete) ''per'' dirempt¹ ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Dirempted
1. dirempt [v] - See also: dirempt
Lexicographical Neighbors of Dirempted
Literary usage of Dirempted
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Journal of Speculative Philosophy: Ed. by Wm. T. Harris edited by William Torrey Harris (1886)
"In general, proof first appears in the stage of Reflection ; it is the effort to
unite the two sides of a dirempted unity; its starting- point is Being, ..."
2. Proceedings of the ... Annual Congress of Correction of the American by American Correctional Association (1900)
"The might of these bonds and accountability for obedience or disobedience thereunto,
can never be finally dirempted from the social or the individual ..."
3. Hegel's Logic: A Book on the Genesis of the Categories of the Mind : a by William Torrey Harris (1896)
"For the self is dirempted into active and passive, or determining- self and
determined-self. This opposition seen by itself without the identity underlying ..."
4. Educational Issues in the Kindergarten by Susan Elizabeth Blow (1908)
"... and of the reintegration of its dirempted elements in a synthetic unity.
, Since the ego is not a mere something which incidentally possesses activity, ..."
5. A Realistic Universe: An Introd. to Metaphysics by John Elof Boodin (1916)
"It may be a case of more profound dissociations, where dirempted systems of
association, each with its own characteristic tendencies, simultaneously or ..."
6. A Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words, Obsolete Phrases, Proverbs by James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps (1847)
"dirempted, Holinshed, Conq. Ireland, p. 52. DIRGE-ALE. A funeral wake. DIRIGE.
A solemn hymn in the Romish church, commencing Dirige ..."
7. Philosophy of Knowledge: An Inquiry Into the Nature, Limits, and Validity of by George Trumbull Ladd (1897)
"On this basis the one experience becomes, by activity of the intellect, dirempted.
It is no longer simply one experience as belonging to the subject of it ..."