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diffusion |
Also found in: Medical, Legal, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.02 sec. |
diffusion [dɪˈfjuːʒən] n 1. the act or process of diffusing or being diffused; dispersion 2. verbosity 3. (Physics / General Physics) Physics a. the random thermal motion of atoms, molecules, clusters of atoms, etc., in gases, liquids, and some solids b. the transfer of atoms or molecules by their random motion from one part of a medium to another 4. (Physics / General Physics) Physics the transmission or reflection of electromagnetic radiation, esp light, in which the radiation is scattered in many directions and not directly reflected or refracted; scattering 5. (Physics / General Physics) Also called diffusivity Physics the degree to which the directions of propagation of reverberant sound waves differ from point to point in an enclosure 6. (Social Science / Anthropology & Ethnology) Anthropol the transmission of social institutions, skills, and myths from one culture to another
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diffusion noun spreading, distribution, scattering, circulation, expansion, propagation, dissemination, dispersal, dispersion, dissipation the development and diffusion of ideas Translations diffusion n (of light, heat, rays, fluid etc) → Ausbreitung f; (Chem) → Diffusion f; (of perfume, odour) → Ausströmung f; (of knowledge, custom, news) → Verbreitung f diffusion [dɪˈfjuːʒ/ən] n (of ideas, information) → diffusione f; (of light, heat, substances) → spargimento diffusion [dɪˈfjuːʒ/ən] n (of ideas, information) → diffusione f; (of light, heat, substances) → spargimento How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| To move culture, you need an array of tricky requirements, from willing early receivers to adapters who will transmute it into local terms (like the singer Ahmed Zaher) to diffusionists who will spread it. Kuklick traces the development of anthropology as a discipline from the armchair evolutionists of the 1880s through the diffusionists of the early twentieth century to the functionalists of the forties with great precision and detail. |
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