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composite
[ kuhm-poz-it ]
adjective
- made up of disparate or separate parts or elements; compound:
a composite drawing; a composite philosophy.
- Botany. belonging to the Compositae. Compare composite family.
- (initial capital letter) Architecture. noting or pertaining to one of the five classical orders, popular especially since the beginning of the Renaissance but invented by the ancient Romans, in which the Roman Ionic and Corinthian orders are combined, so that four diagonally set Ionic volutes, variously ornamented, rest upon a bell of Corinthian acanthus leaves. Compare Corinthian ( def 2 ), Doric ( def 3 ), Ionic ( def 1 ), Tuscan ( def 2 ).
- Rocketry.
- (of a rocket or missile) having more than one stage.
- (of a solid propellant) made up of a mixture of fuel and oxidizer.
- Nautical. noting a vessel having frames of one material and shells and decking of another, especially one having iron or steel frames with shells and decks planked.
- Mathematics. of or relating to a composite function or a composite number.
noun
- something composite; a compound.
- Botany. a composite plant.
- a picture, photograph, or the like, that combines several separate pictures.
verb (used with object)
- to make a composite of.
composite
/ ˈkɒmpəzɪt /
adjective
- composed of separate parts; compound
- of, relating to, or belonging to the plant family Asteraceae
- maths capable of being factorized or decomposed
a composite function
noun
- something composed of separate parts; compound
- any plant of the family Asteraceae (formerly Compositae ), typically having flower heads composed of ray flowers (e.g. dandelion), disc flowers (e.g. thistle), or both (e.g. daisy)
- a material, such as reinforced concrete, made of two or more distinct materials
- a proposal that has been composited
verb
- tr to merge related motions from local branches of (a political party, trade union, etc) so as to produce a manageable number of proposals for discussion at national level
Derived Forms
- ˈcompositely, adverb
- ˈcompositeness, noun
Other Words From
- com·posite·ly adverb
- com·posite·ness noun
- hyper·com·posite adjective
- noncom·posite adjective noun
- noncom·posite·ly adverb
- noncom·posite·ness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of composite1
Word History and Origins
Origin of composite1
Example Sentences
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500 and the tech-focused Nasdaq Composite closed at record highs last week, with most stocks edging upward this week following a pause on Tuesday.
Scherzinger’s Norma, doused in blood and adrift in madness, is treated as though she were a composite of Blanche DuBois, Medea and Sissy Spacek’s Carrie.
It’s easy to accept Sola Fadiran as both Capulet and Lady Capulet, as the two figures blend into Juliet’s composite parent.
In mainland China, the Shanghai Composite Index was up by around 0.5%.
He had a striking resemblance to the composite sketch the 12-year-old witnesses had helped create.
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