Hypertext Webster Gateway: "discrete"

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) (web1913)

Discrete \Dis*crete"\, a. [L. discretus, p. p. of discernere.
See {Discreet}.]
1. Separate; distinct; disjunct. --Sir M. Hale.

2. Disjunctive; containing a disjunctive or discretive
clause; as, ``I resign my life, but not my honor,'' is a
discrete proposition.

3. (Bot.) Separate; not coalescent; -- said of things usually
coalescent.

{Discrete movement}. See {Concrete movement of the voice},
under {Concrete}, a.

{Discrete proportion}, proportion where the ratio of the
means is different from that of either couplet; as,
3:6::8:16, 3 bearing the same proportion to 6 as 8 does to
16. But 3 is not to 6 as 6 to 8. It is thus opposed to
continued or {continual proportion}; as, 3:6::12:24.

{Discrete quantity}, that which must be divided into units,
as number, and is opposed to {continued quantity}, as
duration, or extension.

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) (web1913)

Discrete \Dis*crete"\, v. t.
To separate. [Obs.] --Sir T. Browne.

From WordNet (r) 1.7 (wn)

discrete
adj : constituting a separate entity or part; "a government with
three discrete divisions"; "on two distinct occasions"
[syn: {distinct}]


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