The relationship is, to be precise, exchangeability. From Wordnik.com. [skzbrust: Capital Volume 1 Part 1 Chapter 1 Section 3] Reference
Value value val-yü n. 1: the desirability of something, in respect to usefulness and/or exchangeability 2: worth or importance. From Wordnik.com. [Higgins Hockey Fantasy Index 2010-2011] Reference
Over 95% of all dollars in existence today were "printed" through bank lending since 1971, when Nixon reneged on gold exchangeability. From Wordnik.com. [Bill Baker: The Real Reason for QE2] Reference
But it seems that you're saying that the limited range of VW-money's exchangeability makes it qualitatively different from other money. From Wordnik.com. [There’s nothing ‘just’ about Monopoly money] Reference
He studied the exchangeability of lead atoms into the dissolved substances and was able to confirm that it corresponded to the behaviour of the lead atoms as ions. From Wordnik.com. [The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1943 - Presentation Speech] Reference
The core of the report consists of an analysis of responses to a questionnaire, which deals with various aspects of metadata, such as terminology, creation, availability, exchangeability and linking mechanisms. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2003-08-31] Reference
But whereas money has dominated society as the representation of universal equivalence — the exchangeability of different goods whose uses remain uncomparable — the spectacle is the modern complement of money: a representation of the commodity world as a whole which serves as a general equivalent for what the entire society can be and can do. From Wordnik.com. [2009 August] Reference
If, then, property as it exists in modern civilization has value only in so far as it is exchangeable through some common medium, and if the exchangeability depends on the existence of a system of labour division resulting in a continual interchange of goods and services, it follows that the better the system is regulated the greater will be the degree of security of the component units. From Wordnik.com. [Thesis and Antithesis I: Private Property in a Cultural Civilization] Reference
As an extension of female sexuality, then, commodification also extends that constitutive passivity to the absolute emptiness of fetishization; that is, the stasis and the consequent lack of status of the female figure result in an emptying out of significance that coincides with the process by which fetishization empties bodies, beings, and practices of all significance except their exchangeability with objects (85). close window. From Wordnik.com. [Notes on 'The State of Things: Olaudah Equiano and the Volatile Politics of Heterocosmic Desire'] Reference
For this presupposes the exchangeability of the component parts. From Wordnik.com. [The Mind of the Child, Part II The Development of the Intellect, International Education Series Edited By William T. Harris, Volume IX.] Reference
I was the of nephritis that exchangeability amygdaloid of stinking and big with my parsley on, but off. From Wordnik.com. [Rational Review] Reference
But to the common civilised man the universal exchangeability of this gold is a sacred and fundamental fact. From Wordnik.com. [Love and Mr. Lewisham] Reference
Finally, suspension of any pretense of exchangeability of gold altogether when the dollar was floated in the 1970's. From Wordnik.com. [Eternity Road] Reference
When Richard Nixon canceled the Bretton Woods system in 1971, exchangeability of paper dollars for gold was terminated. From Wordnik.com. [Infowars] Reference
"reasons," whose exchangeability Habermas understands as an assumption inalienable from democratic society as he understands it. From Wordnik.com. [Post-Secular Conviviality] Reference
Assess and implement local preferences and selected community-based standards and best practices for description and authority control to ensure information consistency and exchangeability. From Wordnik.com. [Museum Blogs] Reference
Though it, no doubt, involved Free Trade, what both the Mallets pleaded for was "the policy of Free Exchange" a policy entering and ruling every form of human activity, or, at any rate, everything to which the quality of value inured, and so the quality of exchangeability. From Wordnik.com. [The Adventure of Living : a Subjective Autobiography] Reference
Though it, no doubt, involved Free Trade, what both the Mallets pleaded for was “the policy of Free Exchange” a policy entering and ruling every form of human activity, or, at any rate, everything to which the quality of value inured, and so the quality of exchangeability. From Wordnik.com. [The Adventure of Living]
Humanity does all things by infinitely small degrees: after comprehending the fact that all products of labor must be submitted to a proportional measure which makes all of them equally exchangeable, it begins by giving this attribute of absolute exchangeability to a special product, which shall become the type and model of all others. From Wordnik.com. [System of Economical Contradictions: or, the Philosophy of Misery] Reference
exchangeability of series-manufactured component parts has to be especially pointed out. From Wordnik.com. [1. Objectives and Subject Matters of the Practical Vocational Training in the Techniques of Fitting] Reference
Use values signify the commodity’s place in the ever-developing manifold of human needs and wants, while exchange value represents its commodity-being, its exchangeability, an abstraction that is expressed in quantitative terms as money. From Wordnik.com. [Neoclassical, institutional, and marxist approaches to the environment-economic relationship] Reference
Good exchangeability. From Wordnik.com. [physicsworld.com: all content] Reference
Multi-drive exchangeability. From Wordnik.com. [OCTools] Reference
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