egression
Definitions
noun
The act of going; egress.
That so thou mayest have a triumphal egression
Such things as these which are extraordinary egressions and transvolations beyond the ordinary course of an even piety, God loves to reward with an extraordinary favour […]
A calculated version of the wave field that emanated from a specified location at a specified time.
The egression (H₊) is simply the time reverse of Equation (1).
Similarly applied to the acoustic egression, , the result is an "egression-power map".
The location of a feature on an ammonite fossil outward from the line of the shell's spiral.
The reason for this lies in the fact that a wide-shell-band, running along the margin of the egression, is superposed directly upon the shell of the preceding whorl.
According to Klinger and Kennedy (1989), the hoplitoidean Placenticeras kaffarium displays a rather strong umbilical egression, which gives it a scaphitoid adult morphology.
A centralized or top-down organization.
Experience and the will of one person were becoming an increasingly more determining moment in the practice of the entire collective: a stable egression was developing.
The most obvious example of egression was the relationship of the brain to the sensory organs and other nerve centres of the body.
A legitimate implication an existing law.
This conclusion is an egression from federalism principles.
The tenet, accordingly, has some claim to stand as an egression of "natural" right, even when "natural" is taken in an evolutionary sense.