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View synonyms for synthesis

synthesis

[ sin-thuh-sis ]

noun

, plural syn·the·ses [sin, -th, uh, -seez].
  1. the combining of the constituent elements of separate material or abstract entities into a single or unified entity ( analysis ).
  2. a complex whole formed by combining.
  3. Chemistry. the forming or building of a more complex substance or compound from elements or simpler compounds.
  4. Philosophy. the third stage of argument in Hegelian dialectic, which reconciles the mutually contradictory first two propositions, thesis and antithesis.
  5. Biology. modern synthesis, a consolidation of the results of various lines of investigation from the 1920s through the 1950s that supported and reconciled the Darwinian theory of evolution and the Mendelian laws of inheritance in terms of natural selection acting on genetic variation.
  6. Psychology, Psychiatry. the integration of traits, attitudes, and impulses to create a total personality.


synthesis

/ ˈsɪnθɪsɪs /

noun

  1. the process of combining objects or ideas into a complex whole Compare analysis
  2. the combination or whole produced by such a process
  3. the process of producing a compound by a chemical reaction or series of reactions, usually from simpler or commonly available starting materials
  4. linguistics the use of inflections rather than word order and function words to express the syntactic relations in a language Compare analysis
  5. archaic.
    philosophy synthetic reasoning
  6. philosophy
    1. (in the writings of Kant) the unification of one concept with another not contained in it Compare analysis
    2. the final stage in the Hegelian dialectic, that resolves the contradiction between thesis and antithesis
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


synthesis

/ sĭnthĭ-sĭs /

, Plural syntheses sĭnthĭ-sēz′

  1. The formation of a chemical compound through the combination of simpler compounds or elements.


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Derived Forms

  • ˈsynthesist, noun
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Other Words From

  • synthe·sist noun
  • non·synthe·sis noun plural nonsyntheses
  • re·synthe·sis noun plural resyntheses
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Word History and Origins

Origin of synthesis1

First recorded in 1580–90; from Latin, from Greek sýnthesis, from syn- syn- + the- (stem of tithénai “to put, place”) + -sis -sis
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Word History and Origins

Origin of synthesis1

C17: via Latin from Greek sunthesis, from suntithenai to put together, from syn- + tithenai to place
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Example Sentences

But what Hitler received from Grant’s writing as he studied in Landsberg Prison was the theories behind the policies in the form of a one-volume synthesis of the long, varied, and often conflicting history of the racial sciences accessible to the common reader.

From Salon

As Hisner put it in a Twitter thread, citing pre-print research from Nobel Prize in Chemistry laureate Jennifer Doudna and others, “with N*, the virus could have its cake and eat it too. It can go ahead and phosphorylate N a bit more, boosting RNA synthesis, without having to sacrifice as much assembly efficiency since little N* can take up the slack on that front.”

From Salon

In messages the couple have shared with the BBC, the anonymous Fiverr user says the audio will be used for research into "speech synthesis".

From BBC

But the broader point of the report, which was published by GFI, the Boston Consulting Group, and Synthesis Capital, a venture capital fund that invests in new food technologies, is that meatless meats could take off in the same way EVs have if more public dollars were invested in the industry.

From Salon

But despite 20 years of intensive research, scientists have been unable to fully elucidate what actually happens during the synthesis of COFs.

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synthsynthesis gas