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| <center>For lessons on the topic of '''''Resilience''''', follow [http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Resilience this link].</center> | | <center>For lessons on the topic of '''''Resilience''''', follow [http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Resilience this link].</center> |
| ==Definitiion== | | ==Definitiion== |
− | *1.a. The (or an) act of rebounding or springing back; rebound, recoil. (See also quot. 1656.) | + | *1.a. The (or an) [[act]] of rebounding or springing back; rebound, recoil. (See also quot. 1656.) |
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| ::1626 BACON Sylva §245 Whether there be any such Resilience in Eccho's. | | ::1626 BACON Sylva §245 Whether there be any such Resilience in Eccho's. |
− | ::1656 BLOUNT Glossogr., Resilience, a leaping or skipping back, a rebounding; a going from ones word. | + | ::1656 BLOUNT Glossogr., Resilience, a leaping or skipping back, a rebounding; a going from ones [[word]]. |
− | ::1799 COLERIDGE Hymn to Earth, Mightier far was the joy of thy sudden resilience. | + | ::1799 COLERIDGE Hymn to Earth, Mightier far was the [[joy]] of thy sudden resilience. |
| ::1843 CARLYLE Past & Pr. (1858) 79 The Heaviest..has its deflexions..nay at times its resiliences, its reboundings. | | ::1843 CARLYLE Past & Pr. (1858) 79 The Heaviest..has its deflexions..nay at times its resiliences, its reboundings. |
− | ::1866 J. MARTINEAU Ess. I. 41 The heart does not always propel without resilience. | + | ::1866 J. MARTINEAU Ess. I. 41 The heart does not always [[propel]] without resilience. |
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| :b. Revolt, recoil from something. | | :b. Revolt, recoil from something. |
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− | ::1858 SEARS Athan. III. ii. 267 Those smaller sects whose fierce resilience from Catholicism isolates them from the common reason. | + | ::1858 SEARS Athan. III. ii. 267 Those smaller sects whose fierce resilience from Catholicism isolates them from the common [[reason]]. |
| ::1890 GARNETT Milton 38 Nor can we doubt that the old Puritan fully approved his son's resilience from a church defined by Arminianism and prelacy. | | ::1890 GARNETT Milton 38 Nor can we doubt that the old Puritan fully approved his son's resilience from a church defined by Arminianism and prelacy. |
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| ::1882 MOZLEY Reminisc. I. xii. 85 It was possibly a mutual resilience between him [Hartley Coleridge] and people of more orderly ways that prevented him from standing at Oriel till some years after. | | ::1882 MOZLEY Reminisc. I. xii. 85 It was possibly a mutual resilience between him [Hartley Coleridge] and people of more orderly ways that prevented him from standing at Oriel till some years after. |
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− | *2.a. Elasticity; the power of resuming the original shape or position after compression, bending, etc.; spec. the energy per unit volume absorbed by a material when it is subjected to strain, or the maximum value of this when the elastic limit is not exceeded. | + | *2.a. Elasticity; the [[power]] of resuming the original shape or [[position]] after compression, bending, etc.; spec. the energy per unit volume absorbed by a material when it is subjected to strain, or the maximum value of this when the elastic limit is not exceeded. |
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− | ::1824 TREDGOLD Cast Iron 82 The term modulus of resilience, I have ventured to apply to the number which represents the power of a material to resist an impulsive force. | + | ::1824 TREDGOLD Cast Iron 82 The term modulus of resilience, I have ventured to apply to the number which represents the [[power]] of a [[material]] to resist an [[impulsive]] [[force]]. |
| ::1834 Good's Study Med. (ed. 4) I. 530 The natural elasticity or resilience of the lungs. | | ::1834 Good's Study Med. (ed. 4) I. 530 The natural elasticity or resilience of the lungs. |
| ::1867 C. T. F. YOUNG Fouling Iron Ships 164 To bend back again.., if the metal possesses sufficient resilience to do so. | | ::1867 C. T. F. YOUNG Fouling Iron Ships 164 To bend back again.., if the metal possesses sufficient resilience to do so. |