inherency
21Novelty (patent) — Patent law (patents for inventions) …
22United States patent law — was established to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries; [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Constitution of the United …
23subsistence — noun a) Real being; existence. b) Inherency; as, the subsistence of qualities in bodies. Syn: sustenance, hypostasis See Also: subsist, subsistent …
24inhere — verb /ɪnˈhɪə/ To be inherent; to be an essential or intrinsic part of; to be fixed or permanently incorporated with something; to cleave (to); to belong, as attributes or qualities. See Also: adhere, cohere, inherent, inherence, inherency …
25inherence — noun inherency …
26immanence — noun a) The state of being immanent; inherency. b) The state of dwelling within and not extending beyond a given domain. Syn: immanency …
27inherent — adjective /ɪn.ˈhɪəɹ.ənt,ɪn.ˈhɛɹ.ənt/ naturally a part or consequence of something. You are a human being. You have rights inherent in that reality. You have dignity and worth that exists prior to law. mdash; (). Ant: extrinsic See Also …
28inherence — 1570s, from M.L. inhaerentia, from inhaerentem (see INHERENT (Cf. inherent)). Related: Inherency (c.1600) …
29subsistence — n. 1. Real being. 2. Support, livelihood, maintenance, aliment, nutriment, sustenance, living, food, provision, meat, rations. 3. Inherence, inherency …
30inherence — noun the state of inhering; the state of being a fixed characteristic the inherence of polysemy in human language • Syn: ↑inherency • Derivationally related forms: ↑inherent, ↑inhere • Hypernyms: ↑presence …