tendential

tendential

(tɛnˈdɛnʃəl)
adj
characterized by a particular aim
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
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References in periodicals archive ?
There has been a tendential shift away from an older pattern wherein workers at the same level in the same workplace were paid the same rate, to individualised contract negotiations.
(21) Constantin Schifirneh "Orthodoxy, Church, State, and National Identity in the Context of Tendential Modernity", Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies, vol.
A tendential difference in the ICIQ score of 17 in women from Cologne versus 15 in women from Brühl could be determined in patients who used more than 5 pads per day.
I would venture to state that in Peters's handbook--albeit distorted in economistic terms--one can disclose a timely understanding of fragility as the tendential trait of our everyday life.
Although the theory that the mechanism of action of acupuncture is based on immunomodulation could not be proven significantly, it was possible to show a tendential increase of the IL-10 level in the serum under acupuncture.
The late theologian Ulrich Bach spoke of a tendential "social racism."(74) Does the common substitution of pejorative terms ("idiot" etc.) with emotionally neutral ones diminish or deepen the ditch between "them" and "us"?
The same prohibition of murder, if this precept is known as a conclusion inferred from a principle of natural law, pertains to jus gentium." The judgment here being made is indivisibly tendential, decisional, and conceptual; it is at once natural and positive law.
Regardless of these controversies, Sardoni neglects to incorporate Marx's theory of a tendential falling profitability.