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compound
1[ adjective kom-pound, kom-pound; noun kom-pound; verb kuhm-pound, kom-pound ]
adjective
- composed of two or more parts, elements, or ingredients:
Soap is a compound substance.
- having or involving two or more actions or functions:
The mouth is a compound organ.
- Grammar. of or relating to a compound sentence or compound-complex sentence.
- (of a word)
- consisting of two or more parts that are also bases, forming a compound noun, compound adjective, compound verb, or compound preposition, as housetop, many-sided, playact, or upon.
- consisting of any two or more parts that have identifiable meaning, as a base and a noninflectional affix ( return, follower ), a base and a combining form ( biochemistry ), two combining forms ( ethnography ), or a combining form and a noninflectional affix ( aviary, dentoid ).
- (of a verb tense) consisting of an auxiliary verb and a main verb, as are swimming, have spoken, or will write ( simple ).
- Botany. composed of several similar parts that combine to form a whole:
a compound fruit.
- Zoology. composed of a number of distinct individuals that are connected to form a united whole or colony, as coral.
- Music. of or relating to compound time.
- Machinery. noting an engine or turbine expanding the same steam or the like in two successive chambers to do work at two ranges of pressure.
noun
- something formed by compounding or combining parts, elements, etc.
- Chemistry. a pure substance composed of two or more elements whose composition is constant.
- a compound word, especially one composed of two or more words that are otherwise unaltered, as moonflower or rainstorm.
verb (used with object)
- to put together into a whole; combine:
to compound drugs to form a new medicine.
- to make or form by combining parts, elements, etc.; construct:
to compound a new plan from parts of several former plans.
- to make up or constitute:
all the organs and members that compound a human body.
- to settle or adjust by agreement, especially for a reduced amount, as a debt.
- Law. to agree, for a consideration, not to prosecute or punish a wrongdoer for:
to compound a crime or felony.
- to pay (interest) on the accrued interest as well as the principal:
My bank compounds interest quarterly.
- to increase or add to:
The misery of his loneliness was now compounded by his poverty.
- Electricity. to connect a portion of the field turns of (a direct-current dynamo) in series with the armature circuit.
verb (used without object)
- to make a bargain; come to terms; compromise.
- to settle a debt, claim, etc., by compromise.
- to form a compound.
compound
2[ kom-pound ]
noun
- an enclosure, especially one for prisoners.
- an enclosed or protected area where a group of people live or work, such as a military base.
- any separate cluster of homes, often owned by members of the same family.
compound
1noun
- a substance that contains atoms of two or more chemical elements held together by chemical bonds
- any combination of two or more parts, aspects, etc
- a word formed from two existing words or combining forms
verb
- to mix or combine so as to create a compound or other product
- to make by combining parts, elements, aspects, etc
to compound a new plastic
- to intensify by an added element
his anxiety was compounded by her crying
- finance to calculate or pay (interest) on both the principal and its accrued interest
- also intr to come to an agreement in (a quarrel, dispute, etc)
- also intr to settle (a debt, promise, etc) for less than what is owed; compromise
- law to agree not to prosecute in return for a consideration
to compound a crime
- electrical engineering to place duplex windings on the field coil of (a motor or generator), one acting as a shunt, the other being in series with the main circuit, thus making the machine self-regulating
adjective
- composed of or created by the combination of two or more parts, elements, etc
- (of a word) consisting of elements that are also words or productive combining forms
- (of a sentence) formed by coordination of two or more sentences
- (of a verb or the tense, mood, etc, of a verb) formed by using an auxiliary verb in addition to the main verb
the future in English is a compound tense involving the use of such auxiliary verbs as ``shall'' and ``will''
- music
- denoting a time in which the number of beats per bar is a multiple of three
six-four is an example of compound time
- (of an interval) greater than an octave
- zoology another word for colonial
- (of a steam engine, turbine, etc) having multiple stages in which the steam or working fluid from one stage is used in a subsequent stage
- (of a piston engine) having a turbocharger powered by a turbine in the exhaust stream
compound
2/ ˈkɒmpaʊnd /
noun
- (esp formerly in South Africa) an enclosure, esp on the mines, containing the living quarters for Black workers
- any similar enclosure, such as a camp for prisoners of war
- (formerly in India, China, etc) the enclosure in which a European's house or factory stood
compound
/ kŏm′pound′ /
- A substance consisting of atoms or ions of two or more different elements in definite proportions joined by chemical bonds into a molecule. The elements cannot be separated by physical means. Water, for example, is a compound having two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom per molecule.
Adjective
- Composed of more than one part, as a compound eye or leaf.
Derived Forms
- comˈpounder, noun
- comˈpoundable, adjective
Other Words From
- com·pounda·ble adjective
- com·pounded·ness noun
- com·pounder noun
- noncom·pounda·ble adjective
- uncom·pounda·ble adjective
- uncom·pounded adjective
- uncom·pounding adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of compound1
Origin of compound2
Word History and Origins
Origin of compound1
Origin of compound2
Example Sentences
But Salmonella manages to grow and spread in the gut, even though these protective compounds are present.
Cruchaga also is investigating the potential of metabolites -- substances released by cells when breaking down other compounds as part of their routine processes that are also found in CSF.
Despite the ubiquity of molecular crystals in many everyday products, the ability to predict their three-dimensional structures remains a challenge, especially if a compound can crystallize into multiple forms.
Both the president and prime minister have reportedly fled the presidential compound.
These pores have specific sizes, shapes and other chemical attributes wherein only certain compounds whose characteristics match the 'hole' can fit.
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