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Definition of Recomposition
1. n. The act of recomposing.
Definition of Recomposition
1. Noun. Composition again or anew; the process or result of recomposing. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Recomposition
1. composition [n -S] - See also: composition
Lexicographical Neighbors of Recomposition
Literary usage of Recomposition
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Compendium of the Course of Chemical Instruction in the Medical Department by Robert Hare (1828)
"The barometer gage eudiometer, 128, may be employed in the recomposition of water.
... OF LAVOISIER'S APPARATUS FOR THE recomposition or WATER. ..."
2. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1904)
"... (twelve revolutions per second, for example) by any convenient mechanism, such
as an ordinary rotator used for illustrating the recomposition of light. ..."
3. Text-book of Geology by Archibald Geikie (1903)
"_*: Decomposition and recomposition in mineral-veins. — It has been noticed that
the " country " through which mineral-veins run is often considerably ..."
4. Word Formation in the Roman Sermo Plebeius: An Historical Study of the by Frederic Taber Cooper (1895)
"recomposition : Although recomposition, that is, the restoration in compounds of
the original form of the simple stem, ..."
5. The Latin Language: An Historical Account of Latin Sounds, Stems and Flexions by Wallace Martin Lindsay (1894)
"(10) recomposition and Analogy. In Vulgar Latin, as was mentioned before (5 n),
the accent seems to have rested on the first syllable of the verb in ..."
6. The Manufacture of Iron, in All Its Various Branches: Including a by Frederick Overman (1854)
"... exhibiting the Decomposition and recomposition of Materials in the Blast Furnace.
MATERIALS. (Oxygen Nitrogen Steam j ^ hydrogen Carbonic acid ..."
7. A Textbook of Medical Physics for the Use of Students and Practitioners of by John Christopher Draper (1885)
"recomposition of White Light.—1st. Let a ray of light be received upon a prism
placed edge downwards, as in Fig. 223, and adjusted to produce a spectrum. ..."