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Definition of Interrelatedness
1. Noun. Mutual or reciprocal relation or relatedness. "Interrelationships of animal structure and function"
Generic synonyms: Relation
Specialized synonyms: Psychodynamics
Derivative terms: Interrelated, Interrelate, Interrelate, Interrelationship, Interrelation
Definition of Interrelatedness
1. Noun. The state or condition of being interrelated. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Interrelatedness
Literary usage of Interrelatedness
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Reconsidering Children's Early Development and Learning: Toward Common Views by Sharon Lynn Kagan, Evelyn Moore, United States, Sue Bredekamp (1995)
"CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING THE DOCUMENT The interrelatedness of the ... Attempts to
clarify distinctions in the dimensions underscore their interrelatedness. ..."
2. The International Crisis: the Theory of the State: Lectures Delivered in by James Bryce Bryce, Louise Creighton, William Ritchie Sorley, John Stuart Mackenzie, Alexander Dunlop Lindsay, Hastings Rashdall, Hilda Diana Oakeley (1916)
"The complexity and elaboration of political organization needed in any sphere
will, therefore, depend on the complexity of men's interrelatedness. ..."
3. Mental Health, United States, 1994 edited by Ronald W. Manderscheid, Mary A. Sonnenschein (1995)
"Two critical constructs in children's service systems are coordination and
interrelatedness. Service coordination indicators have been developed, ..."
4. The Chinese Students' Monthly by Chinese Students Alliance (1922)
"The interrelatedness of things, as the philosopher views them, is here presented
in poetic form, and, indeed, not out of harmony with a fundamental view ..."
5. The Seeming Unreality of the Spiritual Life: The Nathaniel William Taylor by Henry Churchill King (1908)
"And in this growing psychological conviction of the complexity of life, of the
interrelatedness of all, we are, thus, only returning to the standpoint of ..."
6. The Drama of the Spiritual Life: A Study of Religious Experience and Ideals by Annie Lyman Sears (1915)
"... the inner nature of sin and salvation and of the way of life as a way of
righteousness; 3d, the idea of The Kingdom of God, or the interrelatedness of ..."