inherency
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Inherency — is a stock issue in policy debate that refers to a barrier that keeps a harm from being solved in the status quo.There are three main types of inherency::*Structural inherency: Laws or other barriers to the implementation of the… … Wikipedia
inherency — [in hir′ən sē, in her′ən sē] n. 1. INHERENCE 2. pl. inherencies something inherent … English World dictionary
Inherency — Inherence In*her ence, Inherency In*her en*cy, n. [Cf. F. inh[ e]rence.] The state of inhering; permanent existence in something; innateness; inseparable and essential connection. Jer. Taylor. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
inherency — /in hear euhn see, her /, n., pl. inherencies for 2. 1. inherence. 2. something inherent. [1595 1605; < ML inhaerentia. See INHERENT, ENCY] * * * … Universalium
inherency — n. inherence; innateness … English contemporary dictionary
inherency — in·her·en·cy … English syllables
inherency — in•her•en•cy [[t]ɪnˈhɪər ən si, ˈhɛr [/t]] n. pl. cies 1) inherence 2) something inherent • Etymology: 1595–1605; < ML … From formal English to slang
inherency — /ɪnˈhɪərənsi/ (say in hearruhnsee) noun (plural inherencies) 1. → inherence. 2. something inherent …
inherency — noun the state of inhering; the state of being a fixed characteristic the inherence of polysemy in human language • Syn: ↑inherence • Derivationally related forms: ↑inherent (for: ↑inherence), ↑inhere ( … Useful english dictionary
Doctrine of inherency — In United States patent law, for a patent claim to be valid, it must claim a subject matter that is novel and non obvious. A claim is anticipated if a single prior art reference, either expressly or inherently, discloses every feature of a… … Wikipedia