Accum


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historical examples

acc-m has preserved, in his now antique pages, some of the recipes in vogue in his day.
curiosities of civilization andrew wynter

an instance of this is related by acc-m, which goes directly to the point.
curiosities of civilization andrew wynter

the following table from acc-m, gives the rate of starch and component parts per cent.
the commercial products of the vegetable kingdom p. l. simmonds

a treatise of the period, acc-m’s lectures, is shown in his coat-pocket.
rowlandson the caricaturist. second volume joseph grego

flour, according to that champion against adulteration, mr. acc-m, varies in quality as much as any thing.
the cook’s oracle; and housekeeper’s manual william kitchiner

acc-mulate

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  • Accumbent

    reclining; rec-mbent: acc-mbent posture. botany. lying against something. historical examples the cotyledons are acc-mbent when they lie with their edges against the radicle, 128. the elements of botany asa gray acc-mbent, ak-k-mb′ent, adj. lying down or reclining on a couch. chambers’s twentieth century dictionary (part 1 of 4: a-d) various the radicle r is folded […]

  • Accumulate

    to gather or collect, often in gradual degrees; heap up: to acc-mulate wealth. to gather into a heap, m-ss, cover, etc.; form a steadily increasing quant-ty: snow acc-mulated in the driveway. his debts kept on acc-mulating. contemporary examples musketeer oil heiress eleanor ritchey had a tendency to acc-mulate things. the world’s 12 richest dogs the […]

  • Accumulated

    to gather or collect, often in gradual degrees; heap up: to acc-mulate wealth. to gather into a heap, m-ss, cover, etc.; form a steadily increasing quant-ty: snow acc-mulated in the driveway. his debts kept on acc-mulating. contemporary examples the crowd that acc-mulated to watch the squabble reportedly applauded and cheered as bieber fled the scene. […]

  • Accumulating

    to gather or collect, often in gradual degrees; heap up: to acc-mulate wealth. to gather into a heap, m-ss, cover, etc.; form a steadily increasing quant-ty: snow acc-mulated in the driveway. his debts kept on acc-mulating. contemporary examples if we have another, the debt we’re acc-mulating now will leave us in a worse position to […]

  • Accumulation point

    a point such that every neighborhood of the point contains at least one point in a given set other than the given point. noun (maths) another name for limit point


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