- impletio
implētio, ōnis, f. (impleo), die Erfüllung, Hieron. in Isai. 11, 40, 3 sqq. Salv. de gub. dei 2, 2 u.a. Eccl.
http://www.zeno.org/Georges-1913. 1806–1895.
implētio, ōnis, f. (impleo), die Erfüllung, Hieron. in Isai. 11, 40, 3 sqq. Salv. de gub. dei 2, 2 u.a. Eccl.
http://www.zeno.org/Georges-1913. 1806–1895.
Impletion — Im*ple tion, n. [L. impletio. See {Implement}.] 1. The act of filling, or the state of being full. Sir T. Browne. [1913 Webster] 2. That which fills up; filling. Coleridge. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
impletion — [im plē′shən] n. 〚LL(Ec) impletio < pp. of L implere: see IMPLEMENT〛 Rare a filling or being filled * * * … Universalium
impletion — /ɪmˈpliʃən/ (say im pleeshuhn) noun 1. the act of filling. 2. the state of being filled. 3. that which fills up; a filling. {Late Latin implētio, from Latin implēre fill up} …
impletion — [im plē′shən] n. [LL(Ec) impletio < pp. of L implere: see IMPLEMENT] Rare a filling or being filled … English World dictionary
impletion — ə̇mˈplēshən noun ( s) Etymology: Late Latin impletion , impletio, from Latin impletus (past participle of implēre to fill up) + ion, io ion more at implement archaic : the act of filling or the state of being full … Useful english dictionary
im|ple|tion — «ihm PLEE shuhn», noun. 1. the act of filling. 2. the state of being filled. ╂[< Late Latin implētiō, ōnis < implēre; see etym. under implement (Cf. ↑implement)] … Useful english dictionary