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Definitions

ascription

[uh-skrip-shuhn] / əˈskrɪp ʃən /


Example Sentences

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“Our provocative ascription of free will to elementary particles is deliberate,” Conway and Kochen write, “since our theorem asserts that if experimenters have a certain freedom, then particles have exactly the same kind of freedom.”

From Scientific American • Feb. 14, 2021

Being a Negro writer, he explained to the critic Kenneth Burke, was not a racial ascription but a cultural legacy.

From New York Times • Dec. 19, 2019

We desire to be recognised for who we really are, and seek in our very ascription the means of uniting our intimate identities with our social selves.

From BBC • Oct. 3, 2015

To some extent, the ascription of malevolent powers to chemicals is an attempt to explain behavior that otherwise seems inexplicable.

From Forbes • Aug. 21, 2014

Anthropopathism, an-thro-pop′a-thizm, n. the ascription to the Deity of human passions and affections—also Anthropop′athy.—adj.

From Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary (part 1 of 4: A-D) by Various