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Modality   /mədˈæləti/   Listen
Modality

noun
1.
A classification of propositions on the basis of whether they claim necessity or possibility or impossibility.  Synonym: mode.
2.
Verb inflections that express how the action or state is conceived by the speaker.  Synonyms: mode, mood.
3.
A particular sense.  Synonyms: sense modality, sensory system.
4.
A method of therapy that involves physical or electrical therapeutic treatment.



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"Modality" Quotes from Famous Books



... aspects. Spinoza [24] starts with the idea of the Infinite, or the All-One, from which there is no logical deduction of the individual. And in Spinoza's system the individual does not exist except as a modality. But the existence of the individual is one of the primordial truths of the human mind, the foremost fact of consciousness. With this, therefore, Leibnitz begins, and arrives, by logical induction, to the Absolute and Supreme. Spinoza ends where he begins, in pantheism; the moral result ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. II, No. 8, June 1858 • Various



Words linked to "Modality" :   sense of smell, audition, diathermy, visual sense, common mood, subjunctive, indicative mood, auditory sense, sense of hearing, intervention, vision, logical relation, taste, physiatrics, mode, sense, physical therapy, indicative, modal, imperative mood, sight, sentiency, somatosense, declarative, subjunctive mood, jussive mood, declarative mood, imperative, optative mood, sensation, sentience, physiotherapy, imperative form, sense of taste, fact mood, optative, interrogative mood, touch modality, grammatical relation, gustation, olfaction, treatment, sensory faculty, hearing, interrogative, smell



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