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Compounding   /kəmpˈaʊndɪŋ/   Listen
Compounding

noun
1.
The act of combining things to form a new whole.  Synonyms: combination, combining.



Compound

verb
(past & past part. compounded; pres. part. compounding)
1.
Make more intense, stronger, or more marked.  Synonyms: deepen, heighten, intensify.  "Her rudeness intensified his dislike for her" , "Pot smokers claim it heightens their awareness" , "This event only deepened my convictions"
2.
Put or add together.  Synonym: combine.
3.
Calculate principal and interest.
4.
Create by mixing or combining.
5.
Combine so as to form a whole; mix.  Synonym: combine.



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"Compounding" Quotes from Famous Books



... 9. OF COMPOUNDING.—And as the mind frames to itself abstract ideas of qualities or MODES, so does it, by the same precision or mental separation, attain abstract ideas of the more compounded BEINGS which include several coexistent qualities. For example, the mind having observed that Peter, James, and John ...
— A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge • George Berkeley

... artificial milk when we cannot do better, but we watch the child anxiously whose wet-nurse is a chemist's pipkin. A pair of substantial mammary glands has the advantage over the two hemispheres of the most learned Professor's brain, in the art of compounding a nutritious ...
— The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table • Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. (The Physician and Poet not the Jurist)

... and your name you won't tell, nor where you come from—only that you've been swimming. 'Swimming,' good Lord! You didn't swim from France, I take it." He flicked his whip and fell into a muse. "And I'm a Justice of the Peace, and the Lord knows what I'm compounding with." He mused again. "Tell you what I'll do," he exclaimed; "I'll take you up to Lydia's as I promised. If Whitmore's there, you shan't meet him if you don't want to: and if the house is full, I'll ...
— The Adventures of Harry Revel • Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch

... vessels arriving from different ports in America, which sailed late in August, without a line for me, it gives our friends here apprehensions that the assertions of our enemies, who say you are negotiating and compounding, are true; otherwise, say they, where are your letters and directions? Surely, they add, if the Colonies were in earnest, and unanimous in their Independence, even if they wanted no assistance from hence, common civility ...
— The Diplomatic Correspondence of the American Revolution, Vol. I • Various

... as a form of British constitutional gout. Parliament touched on the Irish only when the Irish were active as a virus. Our later alternations of cajolery and repression bear painful resemblance to the nervous fit of rickety riders compounding with their destinations that they may keep their seats. The cajolery was foolish, if an end was in view; the repression inefficient. To repress efficiently we have to stifle a conscience accusing us of old injustice, and forget that we are sworn to ...
— The Shaving of Shagpat • George Meredith


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