different between methodist vs emergent
methodist
English
Etymology
method +? -ist
Noun
methodist (plural methodists)
- One who follows a method.
methodist From the web:
- what methodists believe
- what methodists believe about salvation
- what methodist believe about the bible
- what's methodist church
- what's methodist religion
- what's methodist beliefs
- what methodists believe about communion
- what methodists believe about baptism
emergent
English
Etymology
See emerge, emergency.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?.?m??.d??nt/
Adjective
emergent (comparative more emergent, superlative most emergent)
- Emerging; coming into view or into existence; nascent; new.
- Arising unexpectedly, especially if also calling for immediate reaction; constituting an emergency.
- (botany) Taller than the surrounding vegetation.
- (botany, of a water-dwelling plant) Having leaves and flowers above the water.
- (video games) Having gameplay that arises from its mechanics, rather than a linear storyline.
- 2008, Jim Rossignol, This Gaming Life: Travels in Three Cities (page 126)
- In short, emergent games are ones that allow a huge range of possibilities and don't dictate a strict, linear flow of events. A strategy game is emergent because so many units can interact and have some effect on each other.
- 2008, Jim Rossignol, This Gaming Life: Travels in Three Cities (page 126)
- (philosophy, sciences) Having properties as a whole that are more complex than the properties contributed by each of the components individually.
Derived terms
- emergently
Translations
Noun
emergent (plural emergents)
- (botany) A plant whose root system grows underwater, but whose shoot, leaves and flowers grow up and above the water.
References
- emergent at OneLook Dictionary Search
- emergent in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
German
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [em?????nt]
- Hyphenation: emer?gent
Adjective
emergent (not comparable)
- emergent
Declension
Further reading
- “emergent” in Duden online
Latin
Verb
?mergent
- third-person plural future active indicative of ?merg?
Romanian
Etymology
From French émergent, from Latin emergens.
Adjective
emergent m or n (feminine singular emergent?, masculine plural emergen?i, feminine and neuter plural emergente)
- emergent
Declension
emergent From the web:
- what emerging recycling technology exists
- what emerging means
- what emerging markets to invest in
- what emergent literacy
- what emergent curriculum
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