induction
noun
- process of inducting (adding someone as a member)
- electromagnetic process
- type of mathematical proof
- to cause, impell, persuade
- placing into an office formally
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ɪnˈdʌkʃən/
noun
Etymology: Inherited from Middle English induction, from Old French induction, from Latin inductiō, from indūcō (“to lead”). By surface analysis, induct + -ion or induce + -tion.
- An act of inducting.
“I know not you; nor am I well pleased to make this time, as the affair now stands, the induction of your acquaintance.”
“These promises are fair, the parties sure, / And our induction full of prosperous hope.”
- An act of inducting.
“[Strom] Thurmond also condemned [Bayard] Rustin for having refusing ^([sic]) military induction as a conscientious objector.”
- An act of inducting.
“Near-synonym: orientation”
- An act of inducing.
“One of the first examples of the immunogenicity of recombinantly derived antibodies was with murine anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody (OKT3) used in the induction of immunosupression after organ transplantation.”
- An act of inducing.
- An act of inducing.
“Meronym: abstraction”
“For the most part they contented themselves with repeating a few familiar facts or adding a few fresh theories ; they did not attempt a wide induction on the basis of a systematic collection and classification of the evidence.”
- An act of inducing.
- An act of inducing.
- An act of inducing.
- An act of inducing.
- The process of inducing labour for the childbirth process.
- An introduction.
“This is but an induction: I'lldraw / The curtains of the tragedy hereafter.”