Synchronic study
synchronic study syn·chron·ic study (sĭn-krŏn’ĭk, sĭng-)
n.
A study of the structure of a population at one point in time. Also called cross-sectional study.
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- Synchronise
verb (used with object), synchronized, synchronizing. 1. to cause to indicate the same time, as one timepiece with another: Synchronize your watches. 2. to cause to go on, move, operate, work, etc., at the same rate and exactly together: They synchronized their steps and walked on together. 3. Movies, Television. to cause (sound and action) […]
- Synchronism
noun 1. coincidence in time; contemporaneousness; simultaneousness. 2. the arrangement or treatment of synchronous things or events in conjunction, as in a history. 3. a tabular arrangement of historical events or personages, grouped according to their dates. 4. Physics, Electricity. the state of being synchronous. 5. Psychoanalysis. the simultaneous occurrence of causally unrelated events and […]
- Synchronistic
noun 1. coincidence in time; contemporaneousness; simultaneousness. 2. the arrangement or treatment of synchronous things or events in conjunction, as in a history. 3. a tabular arrangement of historical events or personages, grouped according to their dates. 4. Physics, Electricity. the state of being synchronous. 5. Psychoanalysis. the simultaneous occurrence of causally unrelated events and […]
- Synchronistically
noun 1. coincidence in time; contemporaneousness; simultaneousness. 2. the arrangement or treatment of synchronous things or events in conjunction, as in a history. 3. a tabular arrangement of historical events or personages, grouped according to their dates. 4. Physics, Electricity. the state of being synchronous. 5. Psychoanalysis. the simultaneous occurrence of causally unrelated events and […]
- Synchronize
verb (used with object), synchronized, synchronizing. 1. to cause to indicate the same time, as one timepiece with another: Synchronize your watches. 2. to cause to go on, move, operate, work, etc., at the same rate and exactly together: They synchronized their steps and walked on together. 3. Movies, Television. to cause (sound and action) […]