Presentative

ahd-5
  • adjective. undefined
  • adjective. Perceived or capable of being perceived directly rather than through association.
  • adjective. Having the ability to perceive something directly.
  • adjective. Of or relating to a patron's right of presentation to a benefice.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • In ecclesiastical law: Having the right of presentation: as, advowsons are presentative, collative, or donative.
  • Admitting the presentation of a clerk: as, a presentative parsonage.
  • In metaphysics: Consisting of or pertaining to immediate, proximate, or intuitive apprehension or cognition: opposed to representative.
  • Cognitive; pertaining to knowledge.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • adjective. Having the right of presentation, or offering a clergyman to the bishop for institution.
  • adjective. Admitting the presentation of a clergyman.
  • adjective. Capable of being directly known by, or presented to, the mind; intuitive; directly apprehensible, as objects; capable of apprehending, as faculties.
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • adjective. Capable of being directly known by, or presented to, the mind; intuitive; directly apprehensible, as objects; capable of apprehending, as faculties.
  • adjective. Having the right of presentation, or offering a clergyman to the bishop for institution
  • adjective. Admitting the presentation of a clergyman
  • Word Usage
    "In an oral presentative and a five-page summary of hundreds of pages of work, Heymann said, he and his colleagues recommended the creation of “an organizational structure that could draw” on the experience of a small corps of the best interrogators currently working for the government who “could produce what would very likely be the best non-coercive interrogation or interviewing capacity in the world.”"