Accumulative


tending to or arising from ; c-mulative.
tending to wealth; acquisitive.
historical examples

these last men are seldom if ever idealists; they see the world as it is, are men of order and of acc-mulative tendency.
memoir of rev. joseph badger elihu g. holland

next: ‘aia’ is generally an acc-mulative yet depreciative termination.
the browning cyclopdia edward berdoe

darwin -ssumed an acc-mulative influence of external causes in the case of the production of new varieties or species.
darwin and modern science a.c. seward and others

how well this practical horticulturist appreciates and ill-strates the gradual and acc-mulative force of selection!
the variation of animals and plants under domestication, volume ii (of 2) charles darwin

it combines a system of ‘privileged purveyors’ with an acc-mulative savings fund.
france and the republic william henry hurlbert

it is merely a destructive and dispersive instead of a constructive and acc-mulative industrialism.
war and the future h. g. wells

acc-mulative evidence pointed to a likelihood that someone was hiding in the building.
the secret pact mildred a. wirt

the triumph was acc-mulative, and it was crowned by the tent-scene, the battle, and the death.
their majesties’ servants (volume 3 of 3) john doran

concomitant with the acc-mulative process, and as a condition of the latter, there develops an industrial reserve army.
the acc-mulation of capital rosa luxemburg

joy and pleasure are of a transitory nature only, while pain and sorrow are of a permanent and acc-mulative character.
tyranny of g-d joseph lewis

Read Also:

  • Accumulatively

    tending to or arising from ; c-mulative. tending to wealth; acquisitive. historical examples it rolls up continually, acc-mulatively; and another fifty years will show more advance than the past five hundred. the home charlotte perkins gilman

  • Accuracy

    the condition or quality of being true, correct, or exact; freedom from error or defect; precision or exactness; correctness. chemistry, physics. the extent to which a given measurement agrees with the standard value for that measurement. compare (def 6). mathematics. the degree of correctness of a quant-ty, expression, etc. compare (def 5). contemporary examples now, […]

  • Accurately

    free from error or defect; consistent with a standard, rule, or model; precise; exact. careful or meticulous: an accurate typist. contemporary examples accurately predicting the future is, of course, a tricky business. plague or plenty? new report envisions the world in 2030 eli lake december 10, 2012 the column does accurately describe the differences in […]

  • Accurize

    to improve the accuracy of (a firearm). historical examples to accurize the stock, and you put this where you have all metal to wood contact in the stock. warren commission (10 of 26): hearings vol. x (of 15) the president’s commission on the -ss-ssination of president kennedy

  • Accurized

    to improve the accuracy of (a firearm).


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