Q.
Complement refers to wat?
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education,
complement refers
Asked by Innocent girl,
30 Nov '12 01:37 pm
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Answers (7)
1.
Noun :
A thing that completes or brings to perfection.
Verb :
Add to (something) in a way that enhances or improves it; make perfect.
Answered by Anil K Chugh, 09 Dec '12 12:41 pm
A thing that completes or brings to perfection.
Verb :
Add to (something) in a way that enhances or improves it; make perfect.
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2.
A complement is something that makes up a satisfying whole with something else. Those shiny red shoes you just bought complement your shiny red purse.
Complement comes from the Latin complementum, "something that fills up or completes." Complement keeps both the e and the meaning. It's also a verb; if you and your partner complement each other, you make a perfect pair. Something that complements completes or adds a little something.
Complement comes from the Latin complementum, "something that fills up or completes." Complement keeps both the e and the meaning. It's also a verb; if you and your partner complement each other, you make a perfect pair. Something that complements completes or adds a little something.
Source: google search
Answered by anil garg, 05 Dec '12 12:10 am
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3.
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6.
Complement
noun |kmplmnt|
1 a thing that completes or brings to perfection : the libretto proved a perfect complement to the music.
2 [in sing. ] a number or quantity of something required to make a group complete : at the moment we have a full complement of staff.
the number of people required to crew a ship : almost half the ship's complement of 322 were wounded.
Geometry the amount in degrees by which a given angle is less than 90.
Mathematics the members of a set that are not members of a given subset.
3 Grammar one or more words, phrases, or clauses governed by a verb (or by a nominalization or a predicative adjective) that complete the meaning of the predicate.
(in systemic grammar) an adjective or noun that has the same reference as either the subject (as mad in he is mad) or the object (as mad in he drove her mad).
4 Physiology a group of proteins present in blood plasma and tissue fluid that combine with an antigenantibody complex to bring about the lysis of forei ...more
noun |kmplmnt|
1 a thing that completes or brings to perfection : the libretto proved a perfect complement to the music.
2 [in sing. ] a number or quantity of something required to make a group complete : at the moment we have a full complement of staff.
the number of people required to crew a ship : almost half the ship's complement of 322 were wounded.
Geometry the amount in degrees by which a given angle is less than 90.
Mathematics the members of a set that are not members of a given subset.
3 Grammar one or more words, phrases, or clauses governed by a verb (or by a nominalization or a predicative adjective) that complete the meaning of the predicate.
(in systemic grammar) an adjective or noun that has the same reference as either the subject (as mad in he is mad) or the object (as mad in he drove her mad).
4 Physiology a group of proteins present in blood plasma and tissue fluid that combine with an antigenantibody complex to bring about the lysis of forei ...more
Source: my dictionary
Answered by Chocklate, 30 Nov '12 01:42 pm
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