differentiation

/ˌdɪf.əˌɹɛn.ʃiˈeɪ.ʃən/

UK: /dɪf.əˌɹɛn.ʃiˈeɪ.ʃən/

dɪf · əɹɛn · ƩIEꞮ · ʃən (4 syllables)

English Noun
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Definition

The act or process of differentiating (generally, without a specialized sense).

Etymology

From differentiate + -ion, from different + -iate, from differ + -ent, from Middle English differen, from Old French differer, from Latin differō (“carry apart, put off, defer; differ”), from dis- (“apart”) + ferō (“carry, bear”); cognate with Ancient Greek διαφέρω (diaphérō, “to differ”).

Example Sentences

  • "The level of kinesthetic differentiations was established for every individual by using device called kinesthesiometer which allows testing in aquatic environment"
  • "Any hope that the pierines would help to define “the level at which r-K phenomena should be sought has been dashed: apparently species groups (or subgenera, or splitters' genera) are r- or K-selected in the holarctic, whereas in Tatochila the same amount of differentiation is found among populations in a complex in which the process of speciation has not yet been completed."
  • "The integration and differentiation of vital function on the one hand, and the preparation and composition of food-material on the other hand form — as we will become fully aware further on — the two great divisions in the subject-matter of the science of organization, divisions corresponding to the fundamental biplicity of all advanced organization, its animal and its vegetative life."
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