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| opposition to the withdrawal of state support or recognition from an established church, esp. the Anglican Church in 19th-century England. |
| a white, crystalline, water-insoluble solid, C14H9Cl5, usually derived from chloral by reaction with chlorobenzene in the presence of fuming sulfuric acid: used as an insecticide and as a scabicide and pediculicide: agricultural use prohibited in the U.S. |
| association (əˌsəʊsɪˈeɪʃən, -ʃɪ-) | |
| —n | |
| 1. | a group of people having a common purpose or interest; a society or club |
| 2. | the act of associating or the state of being associated |
| 3. | friendship or companionship: their association will not last |
| 4. | a mental connection of ideas, feelings, or sensations: association of revolution with bloodshed |
| 5. | psychol See also free association the mental process of linking ideas so that the recurrence of one idea automatically recalls the other |
| 6. | chem the formation of groups of molecules and ions, esp in liquids, held together by weak chemical bonds |
| 7. | ecology a group of similar plants that grow in a uniform environment and contain one or more dominant species |
association as·so·ci·a·tion (ə-sō'sē-ā'shən, -shē-)
n.
A connection of persons, things, or ideas by some common factor; union.
A functional connection of two ideas, events, or psychological phenomena established through learning or experience.
| association (ə-sō'sē-ā'shən, -shē-) Pronunciation Key
A large number of organisms in a specific geographic area constituting a community with one or two dominant species. |