No result for Rature. Showing similar results...
Colorature
Colorature Col"or*a*ture (?; 135), n. [Cf. G. coloratur, fr.
LL. coloratura.] (Mus.)
Vocal music colored, as it were, by florid ornaments, runs,
or rapid passages.
Contemperature
Contemperature Con*tem"per*a*ture (-t[e^]m"p[~e]r*[.a]*t[-u]r;
135), n.
The condition of being tempered; proportionate mixture;
temperature. [Obs.]
The different contemperature of the elements. --South.
Corporature
Corporature Cor"po*ra*ture (k[^o]r"p?-r?-t?r), n.
The state of being embodied; bodily existence. [Obs.] --Dr.
H. More.
Cratureless
Cratureless Cra"ture*less, a.
Without created beings; alone.
God was alone And creatureless at first. --Donne.
Distemperature
Distemperature Dis*tem"per*a*ture (?; 135), n.
1. Bad temperature; intemperateness; excess of heat or cold,
or of other qualities; as, the distemperature of the air.
[Obs.]
2. Disorder; confusion. --Shak.
3. Disorder of body; slight illness; distemper.
A huge infectious troop Of pale distemperatures and
foes to life. --Shak.
4. Perturbation of mind; mental uneasiness.
Sprinkled a little patience on the heat of his
distemperature. --Sir W.
Scott.
Illiterature
Illiterature Il*lit"er*a*ture, n.
Want of learning; illiteracy. [R.] --Ayliffe. Southey.
Intemperature
Intemperature In*tem"per*a*ture (?; 135), n. [Cf. OF.
intemperature.]
Intemperateness. [Obs.] --Boyle.
Magistrature
Magistrature Mag"is*tra`ture, n. [Cf. F. magistrature.]
Magistracy. [Obs.]
QuadratureQuadrature Quad"ra*ture, n. [L. quadratura: cf. F. quadrature.
See Quadrate, a.]
1. (Math.) The act of squaring; the finding of a square
having the same area as some given curvilinear figure; as,
the quadrature of a circle; the operation of finding an
expression for the area of a figure bounded wholly or in
part by a curved line, as by a curve, two ordinates, and
the axis of abscissas.
2. A quadrate; a square. --Milton.
3. (Integral Calculus) The integral used in obtaining the
area bounded by a curve; hence, the definite integral of
the product of any function of one variable into the
differential of that variable.
4. (Astron.) The position of one heavenly body in respect to
another when distant from it 90[deg], or a quarter of a
circle, as the moon when at an equal distance from the
points of conjunction and opposition.
Quadrature of the moon (Astron.), the position of the moon
when one half of the disk is illuminated.
Quadrature of an orbit (Astron.), a point in an orbit which
is at either extremity of the latus rectum drawn through
the empty focus of the orbit. Quadrature of an orbitQuadrature Quad"ra*ture, n. [L. quadratura: cf. F. quadrature.
See Quadrate, a.]
1. (Math.) The act of squaring; the finding of a square
having the same area as some given curvilinear figure; as,
the quadrature of a circle; the operation of finding an
expression for the area of a figure bounded wholly or in
part by a curved line, as by a curve, two ordinates, and
the axis of abscissas.
2. A quadrate; a square. --Milton.
3. (Integral Calculus) The integral used in obtaining the
area bounded by a curve; hence, the definite integral of
the product of any function of one variable into the
differential of that variable.
4. (Astron.) The position of one heavenly body in respect to
another when distant from it 90[deg], or a quarter of a
circle, as the moon when at an equal distance from the
points of conjunction and opposition.
Quadrature of the moon (Astron.), the position of the moon
when one half of the disk is illuminated.
Quadrature of an orbit (Astron.), a point in an orbit which
is at either extremity of the latus rectum drawn through
the empty focus of the orbit. Quadrature of the moonQuadrature Quad"ra*ture, n. [L. quadratura: cf. F. quadrature.
See Quadrate, a.]
1. (Math.) The act of squaring; the finding of a square
having the same area as some given curvilinear figure; as,
the quadrature of a circle; the operation of finding an
expression for the area of a figure bounded wholly or in
part by a curved line, as by a curve, two ordinates, and
the axis of abscissas.
2. A quadrate; a square. --Milton.
3. (Integral Calculus) The integral used in obtaining the
area bounded by a curve; hence, the definite integral of
the product of any function of one variable into the
differential of that variable.
4. (Astron.) The position of one heavenly body in respect to
another when distant from it 90[deg], or a quarter of a
circle, as the moon when at an equal distance from the
points of conjunction and opposition.
Quadrature of the moon (Astron.), the position of the moon
when one half of the disk is illuminated.
Quadrature of an orbit (Astron.), a point in an orbit which
is at either extremity of the latus rectum drawn through
the empty focus of the orbit. Serrature
Serrature Ser"ra*ture, n. [L. serratura a sawing, fr. serrare
to saw.]
1. A notching, like that between the teeth of a saw, in the
edge of anything. --Martyn.
2. One of the teeth in a serrated edge; a serration.
Temperature
Temperature Tem"per*a*ture, n. (Physiol. & Med.)
The degree of heat of the body of a living being, esp. of the
human body; also (Colloq.), loosely, the excess of this over
the normal (of the human body 98[deg]-99.5[deg] F., in the
mouth of an adult about 98.4[deg]).
Wisdom literature
Wisdom literature Wis"dom lit"er*a*ture
The class of ancient Hebrew writings which deal reflectively
with general ethical and religious topics, as distinguished
from the prophetic and liturgical literature, and from the
law. It is comprised chiefly in the books of Job, Proverbs,
Ecclesiasticus, Ecclesiastes, and Wisdom of Solomon. The
``wisdom' (Hokhmah) of these writings consists in detached
sage utterances on concrete issues of life, without the
effort at philosophical system that appeared in the later
Hellenistic reflective writing beginning with Philo
Jud[ae]us.
Yellow-covered literatureYellow-covered Yel"low-cov`ered, a.
Covered or bound in yellow paper.
Yellow-covered literature, cheap sensational novels and
trashy magazines; -- formerly so called from the usual
color of their covers. [Colloq. U. S.] --Bartlett.
Meaning of Rature from wikipedia
- Sous
rature is a
strategic philosophical device originally developed by
Martin Heidegger.
Though never used in its
contemporary French terminology by Heidegger...
- erasure, the
removal of
evidence of LGBT
groups or
people and ****ness Sous
rature, or 'under erasure', a
deconstructionist philosophical device developed...
-
unreliable and at the same time indispensable. The
device of
placing words sous
rature ("under erasure") has been
adopted in
modern philosophy and
literary criticism...
-
Deconstruction différance
phallogocentrism free play arche-writing
metaphysics of
presence in****tion
pharmakon trace hauntology sous
rature khôra Citationality...
-
idealism Hölderlin's Hymn "The Ister" Khôra Object-oriented
ontology Sous
rature See his
published courses in Gesamtausgabe.
Early Freiburg lecture courses...
- Derrida's
first indebtedness to
Heidegger lies in his use of the
notion of sous
rature ('under erasure'). To
write 'Under erasure' is to
write a word,
cross it...
-
Glamour (with Duc Hérode) (1993) Wake Up (with Papa Wemba) (1996) Sans
Rature (with
Didier Milla,
Madilu System, Papa Wemba) (2005) Olomidé et Fafa de...
- Brussels; "redites et
ratures" (Projekt für ein Schloss),
Museum x,
Museum Abteiberg, Mönchengladbach 2006 "redites et
ratures" (alter Wein, neue Flaschen)...
- l'autre, with André Versaille, Brussels, Belgium, 2012.
Dictionnaire de la
rature, with Geneviève de
Maupeou and
Alain Sancerni,
Actes Sud, 2014 Trouillot...
-
Souleymane Bachir Diagne Sound bite
Sound poetry Sound symbolism Soundness Sous
rature South Park and Philosophy: Bigger, Longer, and More
Penetrating South Park...