Sufficient+quantity
1sufficient quantity — index quorum Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
2quantity — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ considerable, enormous, great, huge, immense, large, massive, sheer, significant, substantial, vast …
3quantity — n. amount 1) a considerable, large; negligible, small; sufficient quantity 2) in (large) quantities factor 3) an unknown quantity * * * [ kwɒntɪtɪ] large negligible small sufficient quantity [ amount ] a considerable [ factor ] an unknown… …
4Quantity theory of money — In economics, the quantity theory of money is a theory emphasizing the positive relationship of overall prices or the nominal value of expenditures to the quantity of money. Origins and development of the quantity theory The quantity theory… …
5quantity — 01. The price goes down for our goods if you buy them in large [quantity]. 02. It costs much less to make your own salsa if you make large [quantities] of it. 03. We buy a huge [quantity] of strawberries and blueberries every summer to preserve… …
6quantity — quan|ti|ty W2S3 [ˈkwɔntıti US ˈkwa:n ] n plural quantities [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: quantité, from Latin quantitas, from quantus how much ] 1.) [U and C] an amount of something that can be counted or measured quantity of ▪ The… …
7quantity — [[t]kwɒ̱ntɪti[/t]] ♦♦♦ quantities 1) N VAR A quantity is an amount that you can measure or count. ...a small quantity of water. ...vast quantities of food... The bowl needs to be re frozen after each use, so it takes a long time to make a large… …
8sufficient — enough, sufficient, sufficiently 1. Enough functions as both an adjective and an adverb, whereas sufficient requires modification as sufficiently. As an adjective (or modifier), enough will normally serve, but sufficient is more idiomatic when a… …
9sufficient — adj. VERBS ▪ be, prove, seem ▪ consider sth, deem sth, regard sth as, see sth as ▪ Do you really regard that explanation as sufficient? …
10technology, history of — Introduction the development over time of systematic techniques for making and doing things. The term technology, a combination of the Greek technē, “art, craft,” with logos, “word, speech,” meant in Greece a discourse on the arts, both… …