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Process   /prˈɑsˌɛs/  /prˈɔsˌɛs/   Listen
noun
Process  n.  
1.
The act of proceeding; continued forward movement; procedure; progress; advance. "Long process of time." "The thoughts of men are widened with the process of the suns."
2.
A series of actions, motions, or occurrences; progressive act or transaction; continuous operation; normal or actual course or procedure; regular proceeding; as, the process of vegetation or decomposition; a chemical process; processes of nature. "Tell her the process of Antonio's end."
3.
A statement of events; a narrative. (Obs.)
4.
(Anat. & Zool.) Any marked prominence or projecting part, especially of a bone; anapophysis.
5.
(Law) The whole course of proceedings in a cause real or personal, civil or criminal, from the beginning to the end of the suit; strictly, the means used for bringing the defendant into court to answer to the action; a generic term for writs of the class called judicial.
Deacon's process (Chem.), a method of obtaining chlorine gas by passing hydrochloric acid gas over heated slag which has been previously saturated with a solution of some metallic salt, as sulphate of copper.
Final process (Practice), a writ of execution in an action at law.
In process, in the condition of advance, accomplishment, transaction, or the like; begun, and not completed.
Jury process (Law), the process by which a jury is summoned in a cause, and by which their attendance is enforced.
Leblanc's process (Chem.), the process of manufacturing soda by treating salt with sulphuric acid, reducing the sodium sulphate so formed to sodium sulphide by roasting with charcoal, and converting the sodium sulphide to sodium carbonate by roasting with lime.
Mesne process. See under Mesne.
Process milling, the process of high milling for grinding flour. See under Milling.
Reversible process (Thermodynamics), any process consisting of a cycle of operations such that the different operations of the cycle can be performed in reverse order with a reversal of their effects.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Process" Quotes from Famous Books



... wasn't worth it she could have let him go. And the family! Think of their accepting his proposal in silence. Why, can they even be married, Henry, without some process ...
— A Touch Of Sun And Other Stories • Mary Hallock Foote

... a day or two, the Captain was missed, and everyone marvelled what was become of him. Mr. Philpot thought he must have been exploring a river, and fallen in and got drowned in the process. Mr. Firedamp had no doubt he had been crossing a mountain bog, and had been suddenly deprived of life by the exhalations of marsh miasmata. Mr. Henbane deemed it probable that he had been tempted in some wood by the large black brilliant berries of the Atropa ...
— Crotchet Castle • Thomas Love Peacock

... instrument of the hands or of the other organs have carried out the behest. The thing is done before it is done when the man has resolved, with a fixed will, to do it. The betrayal was as good as in process, though no step beyond the introductory ones, which could easily have been cancelled, had yet been accomplished. Because there was a fixed purpose which could not be altered by anything now, therefore Jesus Christ regards the act as completed. It is what we think in our hearts that we are; and ...
— Expositions of Holy Scripture - St. John Chapters I to XIV • Alexander Maclaren

... "To be carried along by somebody's suggestions from the time you begin until the time when you are thrust groping and helpless into the world, is the very negation of education. By the nursing process, by the coddling process you are sapping a race; and only loss can possibly result except upon the part of individuals here and there who are so intrinsically strong that you ...
— Library Work with Children • Alice I. Hazeltine

... Horus became assimilated with him. When the belief became more and more insistent that the dead king had acquired the boon of immortality and was really alive, the distinction between him and the actually living king Horus became correspondingly minimized. This process of assimilation was advanced a further stage when the king became a god and was thus more closely identified with his father and predecessor. Hence Horus assumed many of the functions of Osiris; and amongst ...
— The Evolution of the Dragon • G. Elliot Smith


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