Interfamily


[fam-uh-lee, fam-lee] /ˈfæm ə li, ˈfæm li/

noun, plural families.
1.

2.
the children of one person or one couple collectively:
We want a large family.
3.
the spouse and children of one person:
We’re taking the family on vacation next week.
4.
any group of persons closely related by blood, as parents, children, uncles, aunts, and cousins:
to marry into a socially prominent family.
5.
all those persons considered as descendants of a common progenitor.
6.
Chiefly British. approved lineage, especially noble, titled, famous, or wealthy ancestry:
young men of family.
7.
a group of persons who form a household under one head, including parents, children, and servants.
8.
the staff, or body of assistants, of an official:
the office family.
9.
a group of related things or people:
the family of romantic poets; the halogen family of elements.
10.
a group of people who are generally not blood relations but who share common attitudes, interests, or goals and, frequently, live together:
Many hippie communes of the sixties regarded themselves as families.
11.
a group of products or product models made by the same manufacturer or producer.
12.
Biology. the usual major subdivision of an order or suborder in the classification of plants, animals, fungi, etc., usually consisting of several genera.
13.
Slang. a unit of the Mafia or Cosa Nostra operating in one area under a local leader.
14.
Linguistics. the largest category into which languages related by common origin can be classified with certainty:
Indo-European, Sino-Tibetan, and Austronesian are the most widely spoken families of languages.
Compare (def 12), (def 2).
15.
Mathematics.

adjective
16.
of, relating to, or characteristic of a family:
a family trait.
17.
belonging to or used by a family:
a family automobile; a family room.
18.
suitable or appropriate for adults and children:
a family amusement park.
19.
not containing obscene language:
a family newspaper.
Idioms
20.
in a / the family way, pregnant.
/ˈfæmɪlɪ; ˈfæmlɪ/
noun (pl) -lies
1.

2.
one’s wife or husband and one’s children
3.
one’s children, as distinguished from one’s husband or wife
4.
a group of persons related by blood; a group descended from a common ancestor Compare extended family
5.
all the persons living together in one household
6.
any group of related things or beings, esp when scientifically categorized
7.
(biology) any of the taxonomic groups into which an order is divided and which contains one or more genera. Felidae (cat family) and Canidae (dog family) are two families of the order Carnivora
8.
(ecology) a group of organisms of the same species living together in a community
9.
a group of historically related languages assumed to derive from one original language
10.
(mainly US) an independent local group of the Mafia
11.
(maths) a group of curves or surfaces whose equations differ from a given equation only in the values assigned to one or more constants in each curve: a family of concentric circles
12.
(physics) the isotopes, collectively, that comprise a radioactive series
13.
(informal) in the family way, pregnant
n.

early 15c., “servants of a household,” from Latin familia “family servants, domestics collectively, the servants in a household,” thus also “members of a household, the estate, property; the household, including relatives and servants,” from famulus “servant,” of unknown origin. The Latin word rarely appears in the sense “parents with their children,” for which domus (see domestic) was used.

In English, sense of “collective body of persons who form one household under one head and one domestic government, including parents, children, and servants, and as sometimes used even lodgers or boarders” [Century Dictionary] is from 1540s. From 1660s as “parents with their children, whether they dwell together or not,” also in a more general sense, “persons closely related by blood, including aunts, uncles, cousins;” and in the most general sense “those who descend from a common progenitor” (1580s). Meaning “those claiming descent from a common ancestor, a house, a lineage” is early 15c. Hence, “any group of things classed as kindred based on common distinguishing characteristics” (1620s); as a scientific classification, between genus and order, from 1753.

I have certainly known more men destroyed by the desire to have wife and child and to keep them in comfort than I have seen destroyed by drink and harlots. [William Butler Yeats, “Autobiography”]

Replaced Old English hiwscipe. As an adjective from c.1600; with the meaning “suitable for a family,” by 1807. Family values first recorded 1966. Phrase in a family way “pregnant” is from 1796. Family circle is 1809; family man “man devoted to wife and children, man inclined to lead a domestic life” is 1856 (earlier it meant “thief,” 1788, from family in a slang sense of “the fraternity of thieves”).

Happy family an assemblage of animals of diverse habits and propensities living amicably, or at least quietly, together in one cage. [Century Dictionary, 1902]

The phrase is attested from 1844.

family fam·i·ly (fām’ə-lē, fām’lē)
n.

family
(fām’ə-lē)
A group of organisms ranking above a genus and below an order. The names of families end in -ae, a plural ending in Latin. In the animal kingdom, family names end in -idae, as in Canidae (dogs and their kin), while those in the plant kingdom usually end in -aceae, as in Rosaceae (roses and their kin). See Table at taxonomy.

In biology, the classification lower than an order and higher than a genus. Lions, tigers, cheetahs, and house cats belong to the same biological family. Human beings belong to the biological family of hominids. (See Linnean classification.)
see:

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  • Interfascicular-cambium

    noun, Botany. 1. cambium that develops between the vascular bundles. interfascicular cambium (ĭn’tər-fə-sĭk’yə-lər) The cambium arising between the vascular bundles in the stem of a plant. See also fascicular cambium, vascular bundle.

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    [in-ter-fen-uh-strey-shuh n] /ˌɪn tərˌfɛn əˈstreɪ ʃən/ noun 1. a space between two windows. 2. the art or process of arranging the openings in a wall.

  • Interfere

    [in-ter-feer] /ˌɪn tərˈfɪər/ verb (used without object), interfered, interfering. 1. to come into opposition, as one thing with another, especially with the effect of hampering action or procedure (often followed by with): Constant distractions interfere with work. 2. to take part in the affairs of others; meddle (often followed by with or in): to interfere […]

  • Interfered

    [in-ter-feer] /ˌɪn tərˈfɪər/ verb (used without object), interfered, interfering. 1. to come into opposition, as one thing with another, especially with the effect of hampering action or procedure (often followed by with): Constant distractions interfere with work. 2. to take part in the affairs of others; meddle (often followed by with or in): to interfere […]


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