(v. i.) To unite in a kind of sexual union, as two or more cells or individuals among the more simple plants and animals.
(4):
(a.) Containing two or more radicals supposed to act the part of a single one.
(5):
(a.) Agreeing in derivation and radical signification; -- said of words.
(6):
(a.) Presenting themselves simultaneously and having reciprocal properties; -- frequently used in pure and applied mathematics with reference to two quantities, points, lines, axes, curves, etc.
(7):
(n.) A word agreeing in derivation with another word, and therefore generally resembling it in signification.
(8):
(n.) A complex radical supposed to act the part of a single radical.
(9):
(v. t.) To inflect (a verb), or give in order the forms which it assumed in its several voices, moods, tenses, numbers, and persons.