What is the meaning of COHES. Phrases containing COHES
See meanings and uses of COHES!COHES
COHES
US Military
A Digital Software Environment Product
COHES
COHES
COHES
COHES
Acronyms & AI meanings
Kebaktian Minggu Sore
digital echo quantification
: Industrial Relations Research Association
Bad Boys Rape Our Young Girls Behind Victory Garden Walls
University of Aston in Birmingham
Muslim Corpers Association of Nigeria
Field Management System
Dependents Education Assistance
Michigan Physical Therapy Association
Delhi Nursing Council
COHES
COHES
COHES
n.
A medicinal substance made into a cohesive, homogeneous lump, of consistency suitable for making pills; as, blue mass.
a.
Holding the particles of a homogeneous body together; as, cohesive attraction; producing cohesion; as, a cohesive force.
v. i.
To undergo a process common to organic substances by which they lose the cohesion of their parts and pass through certain chemical changes, giving off usually in some stages of the process more or less offensive odors; to become decomposed by a natural process; to putrefy; to decay.
v. t.
To deprive of cohesion by combining chemically with water; to slake; as, to slack lime.
n.
That quality of bodies which keeps them from parting without considerable force; cohesiveness; the effect of attraction; -- as distinguished from brittleness, fragility, mobility, etc.
n.
The quality of a body which resists evaporation or volatilization by heat; solidity; cohesion of parts; as, the fixedness of gold.
n.
Separation from a mass, and gathering about centers or into cavities at hand through cohesive attraction or the crystallizing process.
v. t.
To render heavy or cohesive.
n.
The state of being cohesible.
a.
Cohering, or sticking together, as in a mass; capable of cohering; tending to cohere; as, cohesive clay.
n.
Want of cohesion.
a.
Having parts apt to adhere to each other; cohesive; tough; as, steel is a tenacious metal; tar is more tenacious than oil.
n.
A crack or breach; a gap or fissure; a defect of continuity or cohesion; as, a flaw in a knife or a vase.
a.
Not coherent; wanting cohesion; loose; unconnected; physically disconnected; not fixed to each; -- said of material substances.
a.
To lose cohesion or solidity by a chemical combination with water; to slake; as, lime slacks.
n.
Logical agreement and dependence; as, the cohesion of ideas.
n.
The cohesion of the particles on the surface of a body, determined by its capacity to scratch another, or be itself scratched;-measured among minerals on a scale of which diamond and talc form the extremes.
n.
A substance that is held in a fixed form by cohesion among its particles; a substance not fluid.
a.
Capable of cohesion.
n.
The quality or state of being incoherent; want of coherence; want of cohesion or adherence.
COHES
COHES