Meaning of prospectivity | Babel Free
Definitions
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The state of being prospective rather than retrospective. countable, uncountable
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The quality of being or having a likely location in which to prospect for minerals. countable, uncountable
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A projective relationship between a line and itself by projecting onto an intersecting line from a point on another line that intersects at the same point, and then back on to the first line from a different point on the first intersecting line. countable, uncountable
Examples
“Four properties that stand out as descriptive of behavior at its own level are agency, prospectivity, the search for order in the world, and flexibility.”
“As we shall see, the account of the alethic modalities adopted by Diodorus takes into account the temporal prospectivity of possibility and, thus, avoids Aristotle's criticism of the Megarian equation of possibility and actuality.”
“Even though we cannot guarantee 100% prospectivity, as even Lon Fuller would accept, we do make the claim that the Law is in general prospective.”
“A further ramification of the regional observations concems diamond prospectivity.”
“Despite being comprised largely of a multiply deformed amphibolite and granulite facies metagranitoid terrain, the region includes supracrustal belts of three different ages, all hosting gossans that signal base- and precious metal prospectivity.”
“Countries with limited prospectivity have limited options, and generally limited negotiation power.”
“An understanding of the limits of petroleum systems within basins is critical to an evaluation of their potential prospectivity, with exploration risk increasing in proportion to the distance from an established petroleum system.”
“Schur bases his definitions of equality, of addition and multiplication of projective segments, upon the correspondence known as ' prospectivity,' and, at first, avails himself only of the axioms of connection and of order [Shur's postulates 1. to 8.];”
“If a point O on I is related to A by a prospectivity, then all prospectivities, which (1) have the same double point U, and (2) relate O to A, give the same correspondent (Q, in figure) to any point P on the line I; in fact they are all the same prospectivity, however m, n, S, and S' may have been varied subject to these conditions.”
“Alternatively, Friedrich Schur (1881, p. 253) used Thomae's (1873, p. 11) definition of projectivity in terms of prospectivity to prove the fundamental theorem in a manner which is independent of the Archimedean axiom.”
CEFR level
C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.
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