What's the difference between subsumption and subsumptive?

Subsumption


Definition:

  • (n.) The act of subsuming, or of including under another.
  • (n.) That which is subsumed, as the minor clause or premise of a syllogism.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Subsumption techniques proved superior for compacting a large rule set based on risk factors.
  • (2) They have even allowed, like lambs, the subsumption of their commitment to electoral reform.
  • (3) A detailed description of the individual clinical picture seems to be more informatives than the subsumption under the global term of 'Minor epileptic status'.
  • (4) 4) Adler's theory of social interest permits subsumption of narcissism under lack of social interest rather than acceptance of it as an expression of innate socially negative tendencies.
  • (5) The interaction of unresolvable neurotic phenomena and ideological bias in individual psychoanalysts reflect the increasing subsumption of psychoanalysis under the dominating interests of society--a dependency, which characterizes the actual psychoanalytic practice and theories in our time as basically affirmative.
  • (6) Although the underlying mechanism for these behaviors is not clear, possibilities include the subsumption of both addictive and other preventive behaviors under a more generalized risk taking (or risk avoidance) dimension.
  • (7) Alternatively, we examined the semantic relationships among risk factors in hypercholesterolemia and applied a subsumption technique to reduce the rule set.
  • (8) Because parent-child relationships are often subsumptive (or categorical) in nature, it might be expected that siblings usually share the same semantic types.

Subsumptive


Definition:

  • (a.) Relating to, or containing, a subsumption.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Subsumption techniques proved superior for compacting a large rule set based on risk factors.
  • (2) They have even allowed, like lambs, the subsumption of their commitment to electoral reform.
  • (3) A detailed description of the individual clinical picture seems to be more informatives than the subsumption under the global term of 'Minor epileptic status'.
  • (4) 4) Adler's theory of social interest permits subsumption of narcissism under lack of social interest rather than acceptance of it as an expression of innate socially negative tendencies.
  • (5) The interaction of unresolvable neurotic phenomena and ideological bias in individual psychoanalysts reflect the increasing subsumption of psychoanalysis under the dominating interests of society--a dependency, which characterizes the actual psychoanalytic practice and theories in our time as basically affirmative.
  • (6) Although the underlying mechanism for these behaviors is not clear, possibilities include the subsumption of both addictive and other preventive behaviors under a more generalized risk taking (or risk avoidance) dimension.
  • (7) Alternatively, we examined the semantic relationships among risk factors in hypercholesterolemia and applied a subsumption technique to reduce the rule set.
  • (8) Because parent-child relationships are often subsumptive (or categorical) in nature, it might be expected that siblings usually share the same semantic types.

Words possibly related to "subsumption"

Words possibly related to "subsumptive"