¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Seriated
1. seriate [v] - See also: seriate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Seriated
Literary usage of Seriated
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Truth and Error: Or, The Science of Intellection by John Wesley Powell (1898)
"The slates are seriated and the sedimentary strata are ... Thus kinds are seriated
as forms revealed in structure and figure. The elements of structure are ..."
2. Heredity and Eugenics: A Course of Lectures Summarizing Recent Advances in by William Ernest Castle, John Merle Coulter, Charles Benedict Davenport, Edward Murray East, William Lawrence Tower (1912)
"Out of 1857 adults seriated, the following ... When seriated, this material gave
the following results: ABCDE o 29 247 42 o These passed the winter of ..."
3. The Syllogistic Philosophy Or Prolegomena to Science by Francis Ellingwood Abbot (1906)
"is not preliminary, but subsequent, to the admission of human knowledge itself
as actually existing in the historico-literary form of seriated affirmation. ..."
4. An Investigation of Evolution in Chrysomelid Beetles of the Genus Leptinotarsa by William Lawrence Tower (1906)
"When seriated, as in table 31, they give results that are in complete accordance
... The variations of these glands when seriated give results completely in ..."
5. The Syllogistic Philosophy Or Prolegomena to Science by Francis Ellingwood Abbot (1906)
"is not preliminary, but subsequent, to the admission of human knowledge itself
as actually existing in the historico-literary form of seriated affirmation. ..."
6. American Journal of Dental Science by American Society of Dental Surgeons (1880)
"The function of mind consists of seriated arrestations and releases of the ...
The functions of body are also seriated successions of arrest and release of ..."
7. Chemical Method, Notation, Classification, & Nomenclature by Auguste Laurent (1855)
"Having thus classified the above seriated bodies, there yet remain others, ...
Uric combinations, (these are seriated in respect to one another, ..."