abscession
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Latin abscessio (“a separation”); from abscedere. See abscess.
Noun
[edit]abscession (plural abscessions)
- (rare) A separating; a removal; a going away.
- 1659, John Gauden, Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ Suspiria[1]:
- […] neither justly excommunicated out of that particular Church, to which eh was orderly joyned, not excommunicating himself by voluntary Schisme, declared abscession, separation, or Apostasie.
- 1939, The British Journal of Rheumatism: An Independent Review, page 161:
- I have seen many in the final stage of long illnesses affected by our disease. For Nature has here wished, as it were, in the manner of a crisis in the outer parts of the body to attempt an "abscession" in the sense of an outflow […]
- 1971, Farmer's Digest, volume 35, issue 1, page 86:
- Machine harvest is comparable in cost now to hand harvest and could be better if a suitable abscession material is found.
- (obsolete) An abscess.
- 1610, Barrough, Physick, volume 6:
- The abscession being already come to suppuration […]