Reductive vs Reductiveness - What's the difference?
reductive | reductiveness |
Causing the physical reduction or diminution of something.
(chemistry, metallurgy, biology) That reduces a substance etc. to a more simple or basic form.
*1848 , F Knapp, Chemical Technology; Or, Chemistry Applied to the Arts and to Manufactures :
*:On the relative reductive powers of different classes of American coals, as demonstrated by the experiments with oxide of lead.
*{{quote-magazine, date=2013-03
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*1847 , John Johnson, The theological works of the rev. John Johnson :
*:But then beside the primary and direct sense of the text, the ancients commonly supposed that there was a reductive or anagogical meaning, in which it might be taken.
The quality of being reductive, of reducing things to their components
*{{quote-news, 2009, January 18, Charles Isherwood, Hedda Forever: An Antiheroine for the Ages, New York Times
, passage=There is danger in trying too cleanly to diagram the roots of Hedda’s pathology. That way lies reductiveness . }}
As an adjective reductive
is .As a noun reductiveness is
the quality of being reductive, of reducing things to their components.reductive
English
Adjective
(en adjective)citation, passage=It is likely that the long evolutionary trajectory of Mycoplasma went from a reductive autotroph to oxidative heterotroph to a cell-wall–defective degenerate parasite. This evolutionary trajectory assumes the simplicity to complexity route of biogenesis, a point of view that is not universally accepted.}}
Derived terms
*reductive animation *reductive dechlorination *reductive grammar *reductive groupAntonyms
*oxidativereductiveness
English
Noun
(-)citation
