| 1. | a point of time, esp. one made critical or important by a concurrence of circumstances: At this juncture, we must decide whether to stay or to walk out. |
| 2. | a serious state of affairs; crisis: The matter has reached a juncture and a decision must be made. |
| 3. | the line or point at which two bodies are joined; joint or articulation; seam. |
| 4. | the act of joining. |
| 5. | the state of being joined. |
| 6. | something by which two things are joined. |
| 7. | Phonetics.
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junc·ture (jŭngk'chər) n.
[Middle English, from Latin iūnctūra, from iūnctus, past participle of iungere, to join; see yeug- in Indo-European roots.] |
juncture junc·ture (jŭngk'chər)
n.
The point, line, or surface of union of two parts.