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Showing results for hypostatic. Search instead for hypostatical.

hypostatic

American  
[hahy-puh-stat-ik] / ˌhaɪ pəˈstæt ɪk /
Also hypostatical

adjective

  1. of or relating to a hypostasis; fundamental.

  2. Theology. pertaining to or constituting a distinct personal being or substance.

  3. Medicine/Medical. being in a condition of hypostasis.

  4. Genetics. (of a nonallelic gene) masked by another gene.


Other Word Forms

  • hypostatically adverb
  • nonhypostatic adjective
  • nonhypostatical adjective
  • nonhypostatically adverb

Etymology

Origin of hypostatic

1670–80; < Greek hypostatikós pertaining to substance, equivalent to hypostat ( ós ) placed under, giving support ( hypo- hypo- + sta- stand + -tos verbal adjective suffix) + -ikos -ic

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The alleles that are being masked or silenced are said to be hypostatic to the epistatic alleles that are doing the masking.

From Textbooks • Jun. 9, 2022

Three offspring are yellow because Y is hypostatic to w.

From Textbooks • Jun. 9, 2022

What happens to this notion of goodness and purity when the common and the royal come together in a single person, in a Burke's Peerage version of the hypostatic union?

From Time • Jul. 25, 2013

While Barth seems to be crudely baiting religion, he is actually enunciating his concern with the theological conception of the hypostatic nature of Christ�that Christ was both fully human and fully divine.

From Time Magazine Archive

The manner of the hypostatic union then became an urgent problem.

From Monophysitism Past and Present A Study in Christology by Luce, A. A. (Arthur Aston)