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Definition of Particularisation
1. Noun. An individualized description of a particular instance.
Generic synonyms: Description
Derivative terms: Detail, Particularise, Particularize
Definition of Particularisation
1. Noun. (alternative spelling of particularization) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Particularisation
Literary usage of Particularisation
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. General Principles of the Structure of Language by James Byrne (1892)
"But either kind of particularisation is of the general substantive idea, and it
cannot therefore in these languages be applied to a substantive limited by ..."
2. Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion: Together with a Work on the Proofs by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1895)
"It is not, however, any kind of particularisation of God in Himself, ...
The particularisation, just because God is One, attaches to the other aspect of ..."
3. Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion: Together with a Work on the Proofs by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Ebenezer Brown Speirs (1895)
"It is not, however, any kind of particularisation of God in Himself, otherwise
God would be ... This particularisation is, to begin with, the Divine act of ..."
4. The Scots Law Times by Scotland Land Court (1893)
"No question of the sufficiency of the particularisation could arise here, ...
A mere notice of a claim for disturbance without particularisation was ..."
5. Açvaghosha's Discourse on the awakening of faith in the Mahâyâna by Aśvaghoṣa, Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki (1900)
"In order that this clinging to the false doctrine may be eliminated, be it clearly
understood that space is nothing but a mode of particularisation and that ..."
6. The British Controversialist and Literary Magazine (1870)
"particularisation—a boundless out and out of infinitely different atoms,— infinite
atomisation, and in the crossing streams of infinite contingency, ..."
7. The Monist by Hegeler Institute (1893)
"The fact of knowledge, it is safe to say, is no fact at all ; that is, if there
had been in reality no more particularisation, no more of detail, ..."