Complex

ahd-5
  • adjective. undefined
  • adjective. Consisting of interconnected or interwoven parts; composite.
  • adjective. Composed of two or more units.
  • adjective. Difficult to understand for being intricate or involved; complicated.
  • adjective. undefined
  • adjective. Consisting of at least one bound form. Used of a word.
  • adjective. Consisting of an independent clause and at least one other independent or dependent clause. Used of a sentence.
  • noun. A whole composed of interconnected or interwoven parts.
  • noun. A building or group of buildings used for a single purpose.
  • noun. In psychology, a group of related, often repressed ideas and impulses that compel characteristic or habitual patterns of thought, feelings, and behavior. No longer in scientific use.
  • noun. An exaggerated or obsessive concern or fear.
  • noun. The combination of factors, symptoms, or signs of a disease or disorder that forms a syndrome.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • noun. Anything consisting in or formed by the union of interconnected parts; especially, an assemblage of particulars related as parts of a system.
  • noun. In geometry, a continuous, triply infinite system of infinite straight lines; the whole of any kind of forms in space fulfilling one condition: thus, all the lines that cut a given curve in space constitute a complex.
  • To combine intricately; involve; mix up.
  • Composed of interconnected parts; formed by a combination of simple things or elements; including two or more connected particulars; composite; not simple: as, a complex being; complex ideas; a complex term.
  • Involved; intricate; complicated; perplexing.
  • In the theory of numbers, any expression in the form ai + bj +, etc., where a, b, etc., are integers, and i, j, etc., are peculiar units.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • adjective. Composed of two or more parts; composite; not simple.
  • adjective. Involving many parts; complicated; intricate.
  • adjective. See Fraction.
  • adjective. in the theory of numbers, an expression of the form a + b√-1, when a and b are ordinary integers.
  • noun. Assemblage of related things; collection; complication.
  • noun. all the possible straight lines in space being considered, the entire system of lines which satisfy a single relation constitute a complex. The lines which satisfy two relations constitute a congruency of lines; as, the entire system of lines, each one of which meets two given surfaces, is a congruency.
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • adjective. Made up of multiple parts; intricate or detailed.
  • adjective. Not simple or straightforward.
  • adjective. Of a number, of the form a + bi, where a and b are real numbers and i is the square root of −1.
  • adjective. A curve, polygon or other figure that crosses or intersects itself.
  • noun. A problem.
  • noun. A collection of buildings with a common purpose, such as a university or military base.
  • noun. A psychologically based dislike or fear of a particular thing.
  • noun. A thunderstorm that forms when two storm fronts collide.
  • noun. A structure consisting of a central atom or molecule weakly connected to surrounding atoms or molecules.
  • verb. To form a complex with another substance
  • WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
  • noun. a conceptual whole made up of complicated and related parts
  • noun. a compound described in terms of the central atom to which other atoms are bound or coordinated
  • noun. a whole structure (as a building) made up of interconnected or related structures
  • adjective. complicated in structure; consisting of interconnected parts
  • noun. (psychoanalysis) a combination of emotions and impulses that have been rejected from awareness but still influence a person's behavior
  • Word Usage
    "Then is Perception, in the prefent way of confidering it, faid to be fimple, when the Objeft of it is fimple, and then complex when the Objeft of it is complex* And fince the intire and ade - quate Objeft of Thought (as will hereafter ap - pear) is cpmprifed within the compafs of Ideas and of their Relations, we may more explicitly fay that then is Perception fimple when it is tlie Contemplation of Ideas only, and then complex when with the Ideas it takes in alfo the Confideration of their Relations and effen - tial Habitudes."
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