Mate logo
Ana Sayfa
Uygulamalar
MacMac + SafariiOSiPhone + iPadChromeGoogle ChromeFirefoxMozilla FirefoxOperaOperaEdgeMicrosoft Edge
BlogYardım Merkeziİletişim
Uygulamalar

iPhone + iPad

Yardım Merkezi, sürüm notları, İndir

Mac + Safari

Yardım Merkezi, sürüm notları, İndir

Google Chrome

Yardım Merkezi, İndir

Mozilla Firefox

Yardım Merkezi, İndir

Opera

Yardım Merkezi, İndir

Microsoft Edge

Yardım Merkezi, İndir
Destek
İndirYardım MerkeziDesteklenen dillerPara iadesi isteŞifreyi yenileSeri kodunu yenileGizlilik politikası
İLETİŞİMDE KALIN
İletişimTwitterBlog
Site dili
ücretsiz hizmetler
Web çevirisiFiil çekimleriDer Die Das aramaUsage examplesWordsDefinitionIdioms
Mate logo
Ana Sayfa
Uygulamalar
MacMac + SafariiOSiPhone + iPadChromeGoogle ChromeFirefoxMozilla FirefoxOperaOperaEdgeMicrosoft Edge
BlogYardım Merkeziİletişim
Uygulamalar

iPhone + iPad

Yardım Merkezi, sürüm notları, İndir

Mac + Safari

Yardım Merkezi, sürüm notları, İndir

Google Chrome

Yardım Merkezi, İndir

Mozilla Firefox

Yardım Merkezi, İndir

Opera

Yardım Merkezi, İndir

Microsoft Edge

Yardım Merkezi, İndir
Destek
İndirYardım MerkeziDesteklenen dillerPara iadesi isteŞifreyi yenileSeri kodunu yenileGizlilik politikası
İLETİŞİMDE KALIN
İletişimTwitterBlog
Site dili
ücretsiz hizmetler
Web çevirisiFiil çekimleriDer Die Das aramaUsage examplesWordsDefinitionIdioms

Definition of "acephalous" in İngilizce

adjective

  1. Having no head.

  2. (zoology, applied to bivalve mollusks) Without a distinct head.

  3. (botany) Having the style spring from the base, instead of from the apex, as is the case in certain ovaries

  4. (social sciences, political science, sociology) A system of society without centralised state authority, where power is welded amongst groups of community entities e.g. clans. Without a leader or chief.

    • an acephalous society / community
  5. (prosody) Deficient in the beginning, as a line of poetry that is missing its expected opening syllable.

  6. Lacking the first portion of the text. (of a manuscript)

  7. (rare) Without a beginning.

    • 1828, Thomas de Quincey, review of Elements of Rhetoric by Richard Whately, in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 24, No. 147, December 1828, p. 905, Men wrote eloquently, because they wrote feelingly: they wrote idiomatically, because they wrote naturally, and without affectation: but if a false or acephalous structure of sentence,—if a barbarous idiom—or an exotic word happened to present itself, no writer of the 17th century seems to have had any such scrupulous sense of the dignity belonging to his own language, as should make it a duty to reject it, or worth his while to re-model a line.