Definition of Manifoldnesses

1. manifoldness [n] - See also: manifoldness

Lexicographical Neighbors of Manifoldnesses

manifestly
manifestness
manifesto
manifestoed
manifestoes
manifestoing
manifestolike
manifestos
manifests
manifold
manifold paper
manifolded
manifolding
manifoldly
manifoldness
manifoldnesses (current term)
manifolds
maniform
manihoc
manihocs
manihots
manikin
manikins
manila maguey
manila paper
manila tamarind
manilas
manilla
manilla paper
manillas

Literary usage of Manifoldnesses

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Number and Its Algebra: Syllabus of Lectures on the Theory of Number and Its by Arthur Lefevre (1896)
"Disparate denotes a system of manifoldnesses differing in kind; that is, such as could ... As already said, most homogeneous manifoldnesses are continuous. ..."

2. Bulletin of the New York Mathematical Society by New York Mathematical Society (1893)
"Thus point, curve, and surface agree in being manifoldnesses of oo' elements, ea<:h of which is united in position with /he oo' adjoining elements. ..."

3. The Monist by Hegeler Institute (1903)
"He says : " manifoldnesses in which, as in the Plane and in Space, ... case of the manifoldnesses to be here investigated ; they require a special name, ..."

4. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"Each of these manifoldnesses is no doubt continuous, and each of them is of ... There are also other three-dimensioned and continuons manifoldnesses from ..."

5. Mathematical Papers by William Kingdon Clifford (1882)
"To find the simplest cases, I shall seek first an expression for manifoldnesses of n— I dimensions which are everywhere equidistant from the origin of the ..."

6. The Evanston Colloquium: Lectures on Mathematics Delivered from Aug. 28 to by Felix Klein (1893)
"The actual existence of transcendental numbers which thus naturally follows from Cantor's theory of manifoldnesses had been proved before, ..."

7. The Application of Statistical Methods to the Problems of Psychophysics by Friedrich Maria Urban (1908)
"Those objects which we call spatial manifoldnesses belong to three different types. The sets of fundamental propositions required for the description of ..."

8. The Foundations of Mathematics by Paul Carus (1908)
"He says: "manifoldnesses in which, as in the plane and in space, the line-element ... are therefore only a particular case of the manifoldnesses to be here ..."

Other Resources:

Search for Manifoldnesses on Dictionary.com!Search for Manifoldnesses on Thesaurus.com!Search for Manifoldnesses on Google!Search for Manifoldnesses on Wikipedia!

Search