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synesis

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
syn·e·sis  (sn-ss)
n.
A construction in which a form, such as a pronoun, differs in number but agrees in meaning with the word governing it, as in If the group becomes too large, we can split them in two.

[Greek sunesis, union, understanding, from sunenai, to understand, bring together : sun-, syn- + henai, to send, hurl; see y- in Indo-European roots.]

synesis [ˈsɪnɪsɪs]
n
(Linguistics / Grammar) a grammatical construction in which the inflection or form of a word is conditioned by the meaning rather than the syntax, as for example the plural form have with the singular noun group in the sentence the group have already assembled
[via New Latin from Greek sunesis union, from sunienai to bring together, from syn- + hienai to send]

synesis
the practice of using a grammatical construction that conforms with meaning rather than with strict regard for syntax, such as a plural form of a verb following a singular subject that has a plural meaning.
See also: Grammar


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The most active market for these securitisations is in the UK, where a number of buy-out funds, such as Paternoster (backed by Deutsche Bank) and Synesis Life (backed by JP Morgan), have recently been set up for this purpose.
The man who is callidus--that is to say, the man who is shrewd and who possesses what the Greeks term synesis ("wit," for which Palla finds a Latin equivalent in the term prudentia)--is treated disparagingly by the elitist Strozzi: "He is thus called whose soul grows callous from use, as from working with the hands.
8-9), Aristotle discusses right reasoning about truth in terms of the analogous virtues synesis ("understanding" or "intelligence") and gnome ("sense" or "judgment"), and goes on to argue that these intellectual virtues cannot be separated (Nichomachean Ethics, VI.
 
 
 
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