Definition of Optionality

1. Noun. (finance business) The value of additional optional investment opportunities available only after having made an initial investment. ¹

2. Noun. Quality or state in which choice or discretion is allowed. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Optionality

1. [n -TIES]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Optionality

optimum dose
optimum pH
optimum temperature
optimums
optineurin
opting
opting in
opting out
option
optionable
optionaire
optionaires
optional
optionalities
optionality (current term)
optionally
optionally piloted vehicle
optionals
optioned
optionee
optionees
optioning
optionlike
options
optique
opto-
optoacoustic
optoacoustically
optocoelia

Literary usage of Optionality

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

1. Electronic Resource Management: Report of the DLF Resource Management Initiative by Timothy D. Jewell (2005)
"optionality AND CARDINALITY Symbols at the ends of the relationship lines indicate the optionality and the cardinality of each relationship. ..."

2. The Works of Jeremy Bentham by Jeremy Bentham, John Bowring (1843)
"In particular, as to optionality, when the only shape in which evidence is admitted is that favourite shape which is the worst of all shapes in which the ..."

3. Projected Costs of Generating Electricity: 2005 Update by OECD Nuclear Energy Agency, International Energy Agency (2005)
"optionality and real options The impracticality of storing electricity and the inelasticity of electricity demand relative to price make the flexibility of ..."

4. A System of General Ethics by Leander Sylvester Keyser (1918)
"conditions, have a larger degree of optionality than have those who are more or less handicapped by bad birth and surroundings. This does not mean, however, ..."

5. Hegel's Philosophy of Mind by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, William Wallace (1894)
"... object^ mind—^development in which the content of auto: 'mous action loses its contingency and optionality. The discussion of the true intrinsic ..."

6. Outlines of Analogical Philosophy: Being a Primary View of the Principles by George Field (1839)
"... which very choosing or consenting implies freedom or optionality: free will is, therefore, at once active and passive, or concurrent and relative. 1309. ..."

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