Noun, : the numerous complicacies of travel in such a remote country. From Dictionary.com.
Aliyev who escaped to Austria in the middle of 2007 was accused by the Kazakh court of several grave crimes, such as complicacy of kidnappings, tortures and murders and attempts of a coup. From Wordnik.com. Reference
The academic and the aesthetic thus fuse into a unique hermeneutic, questioning whose methodological validity is risking complicacy. From Wordnik.com. [Seventy tomes of The Mother & Sri Aurobindo are epitome of a discursive culture] Reference
OWNER OF INDUSTRIES can only file a separate suit for compensation in separate CIVIL COURT CREATING MORE complicacy for life long litigation WITH OF NO RESULT. From Wordnik.com. [The CBA’s Support for the Rule of Law in Developing Countries — Slaw] Reference
Or it is just complicacy: President Karzai of Afghanistan was a lobbyist for Gulf Oil's pipeline plans, and does one suspect that the pipeline will be built as soon as his power is consolidated?. From Wordnik.com. [Eric Greenberg: From September of 2004!] Reference
The venality of the conqueror's administration, the judicial complicacy, want of public works, weak imperial government, and arrogant local rule tended to dismember the once powerful Spanish Empire. From Wordnik.com. [The Philippine Islands] Reference
Kazakhstan denies any complicacy to the case of "hiring" policemen in order to find out Aliyev's address. From Wordnik.com. Reference
Among the earliest tools of any complicacy which a man, especially a man of letters, gets to handle, are his Class-books. From Wordnik.com. [Sartor Resartus, and On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic in History] Reference
Everything was simple at Nancepean except the parishioners; but Mark was still too young and too simple himself to apprehend their complicacy. From Wordnik.com. [The Altar Steps] Reference
At the same time, the very character of mental phenomena, in their higher complicacy and refinement, only renders them the more richly fitted to display the. From Wordnik.com. [Theism: The Witness of Reason and Nature to an All-Wise and Beneficent Creator.] Reference
In this chapter, however, we glance at the nervous system simply in its organic arrangement, as contributing, in the mere complicacy and order of its parts, to the force of our preceding evidence. From Wordnik.com. [Theism: The Witness of Reason and Nature to an All-Wise and Beneficent Creator.] Reference
Incidents in the Life of a Slavegirl is said to be the definitive book that introduced northerners to the lived reality of slavery allowing may to 'see' their complicacy through their tacit support of the Fugitive Slave Law. From Wordnik.com. [PopMatters] Reference
If, in the various organs of sense, the exquisite complicacy and delicacy of the nervous system, we recognise the clear manifestation of creative design, no less surely must we recognise it in the wonderful mental capacity to which these minister. From Wordnik.com. [Theism: The Witness of Reason and Nature to an All-Wise and Beneficent Creator.] Reference
Dolland's subsequent discovery of the achromatic effect of combining various glasses, and Mr. Blair's still more recent experiments on the powers of different refracting media, we were not able distinctly to perceive the operation and use of the complicacy in the structure of the eye. From Wordnik.com. [The Fallen Star, or, the History of a False Religion by E.L. Bulwer; And, A Dissertation on the Origin of Evil by Lord Brougham] Reference
Silence often equals complicacy. From Wordnik.com. [OpEdNews] Reference
LearnThatWord and the Open Dictionary of English are programs by LearnThat Foundation, a 501(c)3 nonprofit.
Questions? Feedback? We want to hear from you!
Email us
or click here for instant support.
Copyright © 2005 and after - LearnThat Foundation. Patents pending.

