释义 |
Definition of consentient in English: consentientadjective kənˈsɛnʃ(ə)ntkənˈsɛn(t)ʃ(ə)nt archaic Of the same opinion in a matter; in agreement. 〈古〉同意的,赞同的,无异议的;一致的 Example sentencesExamples - That they were so, we have the consentient testimony of all portions of Catholic Christendom.
- If the consentient votes achieve 3, it may be deemed as a pass, while if the consentient votes are less than 3, it will be deemed as a failure.
- The perceptual object arises within this interactive matrix and is ‘determined by its reference to some percipient event, or individual, in a consentient set’.
- These were a literature review, an examination of current activities in England and the Netherlands and a workshop to judge the consentient view of potential stakeholders.
- The form within a consentient set is determined by reference to a percipient individual.
Synonyms united, in complete agreement, in complete accord, of one mind, like-minded, of the same mind, in harmony, at one, with one voice, concordant, undivided
OriginEarly 17th century: from Latin consentient- 'agreeing', from the verb consentire (see consent). Definition of consentient in US English: consentientadjectivekənˈsen(t)SH(ə)ntkənˈsɛn(t)ʃ(ə)nt archaic Of the same opinion in a matter; in agreement. 〈古〉同意的,赞同的,无异议的;一致的 Example sentencesExamples - If the consentient votes achieve 3, it may be deemed as a pass, while if the consentient votes are less than 3, it will be deemed as a failure.
- The form within a consentient set is determined by reference to a percipient individual.
- The perceptual object arises within this interactive matrix and is ‘determined by its reference to some percipient event, or individual, in a consentient set’.
- That they were so, we have the consentient testimony of all portions of Catholic Christendom.
- These were a literature review, an examination of current activities in England and the Netherlands and a workshop to judge the consentient view of potential stakeholders.
Synonyms united, in complete agreement, in complete accord, of one mind, like-minded, of the same mind, in harmony, at one, with one voice, concordant, undivided
OriginEarly 17th century: from Latin consentient- ‘agreeing’, from the verb consentire (see consent). |