different between nascence vs nascency

nascence

English

Etymology

From Latin nascentem (arising young, immature), present participle of nasci (to be born) (Old Latin gnasci; see genus).

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation, US) IPA(key): /?ne?.s?ns/

Noun

nascence (plural nascences)

  1. (rare) Birth.
    • 2004, Linda Dorrell, The Trees of Eden: A Novel, Fleming H Revell Company (?ISBN):
      He had discerned that I was with child. He was a physician first. When he came around offering to see me through my baby's nascence, Mother so thoroughly scolded him for his audacity that he was again left speechless. "I will see to the birth ..."
  2. Coming into being; inception, beginning.
    • 2014, Terry Rey, Bourdieu on Religion: Imposing Faith and Legitimacy, Routledge (?ISBN), page 119:
      Careful examination of Romaine's prophecy reveals the operative nature of the Kongolese religious habitus in the nascence of Haitian Vodou, a religion that truly began to crystallize during the Revolution.

References

nascence From the web:

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nascency

English

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?ne?s?nsi/

Noun

nascency (countable and uncountable, plural nascencies)

  1. A state of incipiency; a quality of nascence.
    • 1889, William James and James Ward, "The Psychological Theory of Extension," Mind, vol. 14, no. 53, p. 108:
      [W]e are, therefore, sure in advance, of being right, if we say of any perception that first it didn't exist, and that then there was a mere suggestion and nascency of it, which grew more definite, until, at last, the thing itself was fully established.

nascency From the web:

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