conjugation
noun
- creation of derived forms of a verb
- biology: join together two compounds
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˌkɒnd͡ʒəˈɡeɪʃən/ / /ˌkɑnd͡ʒəˈɡeɪʃən/
noun
Etymology: Borrowed from Latin coniugātiō (“combining, connecting; conjugation”), from coniugō (“join, unite together”). Equivalent to conjugate + -ion.
- The coming together of things; a union.
- The temporary fusion of organisms, especially as part of sexual reproduction.
- Sexual relations within marriage.
- In some languages, one of several classifications of verbs categorized into distinct classes based on the specific inflectional patterns they exhibit.
“In ſo moche that if any verbe be of the thyꝛde coniugation / I ſet out all his rotes and tenſes[…]”
- The act or process of conjugating a verb.
- The product of that act: the conjugated forms of a verb, collected into a list or recitation.
“Meronym: principal parts”
- The inflection of nouns or other words besides verbs; a declension.
“Nouns ending in a vowel other than a, which do not conform to any phonological pattern of noun conjugation, do not decline.”
- A system of delocalized orbitals consisting of alternating single bonds and double bonds.
- A mapping sending x to gxg⁻¹, where g and x are elements of a group; an inner automorphism.
- A function which negates the non-real part of a complex or hypercomplex number; a complex conjugation.