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Amplitude   /ˈæmplətˌud/   Listen
noun
Amplitude  n.  
1.
State of being ample; extent of surface or space; largeness of dimensions; size. "The cathedral of Lincoln... is a magnificent structure, proportionable to the amplitude of the diocese."
2.
Largeness, in a figurative sense; breadth; abundance; fullness.
(a)
Of extent of capacity or intellectual powers. "Amplitude of mind." "Amplitude of comprehension."
(b)
Of extent of means or resources. "Amplitude of reward."
3.
(Astron.)
(a)
The arc of the horizon between the true east or west point and the center of the sun, or a star, at its rising or setting. At the rising, the amplitude is eastern or ortive: at the setting, it is western, occiduous, or occasive. It is also northern or southern, when north or south of the equator.
(b)
The arc of the horizon between the true east or west point and the foot of the vertical circle passing through any star or object.
4.
(Gun.) The horizontal line which measures the distance to which a projectile is thrown; the range.
5.
(Physics) The extent of a movement measured from the starting point or position of equilibrium; applied especially to vibratory movements.
6.
(math.) An angle upon which the value of some function depends; a term used more especially in connection with elliptic functions.
Magnetic amplitude, the angular distance of a heavenly body, when on the horizon, from the magnetic east or west point as indicated by the compass. The difference between the magnetic and the true or astronomical amplitude (see 3 above) is the "variation of the compass."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Amplitude" Quotes from Famous Books



... amplitude of expression are realised through a method at once plastic and unlaboured; his art has spontaneity—the deceptive spontaneity of the expert craftsman. It is not, in its elements, a strikingly novel style. His harmony, per se, is not unusual, if one sets it beside the surprising ...
— Edward MacDowell • Lawrence Gilman

... among the master-pieces of early printing: but what will be your notions of the copy NOW under description, when I tell you, not only that it once belonged to our beloved FRANCIS I., but that, for amplitude and condition, it rivals the copy in the library at St. James's Place? In short, it was precisely between this very copy, and that of my Lord Spencer, that M. Van Praet paused— ("J'ai balance" were, I think, the words used to me by that knowing bibliographer) and pondered and hesitated ...
— A Bibliographical, Antiquarian and Picturesque Tour in France and Germany, Volume Two • Thomas Frognall Dibdin

... rosy-faced mother, who used to say that she did not know where Elsie had come by "those ghaist-like eyes o' hers," and as for those washed-out cheeks, "there was no accountin' for them neither;" and the worthy matron would go on to narrate with what abundance and amplitude Elsie had been ministered to all her life; and yet Elsie glided about still and pale, with her large eyes shining like precious stones, generally hungrily possessed by some book which she held in her hand. She had an insatiable appetite for reading, and had ...
— Geordie's Tryst - A Tale of Scottish Life • Mrs. Milne Rae

... trousers, reinforced with leather knee caps and jointly sustained by suspenders and a belt, fitted in loose folds around his stocky legs. On his head was a big sun helmet, and around his waist, less generous in amplitude than formerly, was a partly filled belt of Winchester cartridges. His horse was a stout little Abyssinian shooting pony, gray of color and lean in build, and in the blood-stained saddle-bag was a well-worn copy of Macaulay's Essays, bound in pigskin. Our hero—for it was he—was ...
— In Africa - Hunting Adventures in the Big Game Country • John T. McCutcheon

... substance, yet at the end of it it is not the intelligent thinking principle itself. The criterion is in the word "vibrations." However delicately etheric the substance its movement commences by the vibration of its particles, and a vibration is a wave having a certain length, amplitude, and periodicity, that is to say, something which can exist only in terms of space and time; and as soon as we are dealing with anything capable of the conception of measurement we may be quite certain that we are not dealing with Spirit but only with one of its vehicles. Therefore ...
— The Edinburgh Lectures on Mental Science • Thomas Troward


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