esaslılık, önem: the speech lacked substance. konuşmada önemli hiçbir

listen to the pronunciation of esaslılık, önem: the speech lacked substance. konuşmada önemli hiçbir
Turkish - English
{i} substance
The essential part of anything; the most vital part
Physical matter; material
Drugs (illegal narcotics)

substance abuse.

what a communication that is about something is about
Any kind of matter all specimens of which have the same chemical composition and physical properties
To furnish or endow with substance; to supply property to; to make rich
an accident waiting to happen
Body; matter; material of which a thing is made; hence, substantiality; solidity; firmness; as, the substance of which a garment is made; some textile fabrics have little substance
The "something" which has all the necessary accidents (qualities), which is the "thing" itself, this "something" is what the philosophers call "substance" For example, regarding the bread and wine of the Eucharist, the mind is not left to itself By the revelation of Christ the mind knows that the "substance" has been changed, in the one case into the "substance" of His Body, in the other case into the "substance" of His Blood Our senses perceive "accidents" of bread and wine; only the mind knows the "substance" of His Body and Blood See the related terms Nature and Essence
In general, that which is the underlying ground of all phenomenon For Hegel, the Absolute is both Substance and Subject - the "living substance "
weight in pounds of a ream of paper cut to its standard size (e g , 500 sheets of 20 lb Bond in 17x22 in size would be Substance 20) (See also: Basis Weight )
Material possessions; estate; property; resources
the weight in pounds of a ream of paper
the choicest or most essential or most vital part of some idea or experience; "the gist of the prosecutor's argument"; "the heart and soul of the Republican Party"; "the nub of the story"
matter, objects (the smallest part of which is molecule)
something which can exist by itself, is the substrate underlying the existence of other things, and is the subject of which other things are predicated In his Metaphysics Aristotle considered what can be substance: matter, form, or a combination of matter and form According to various criteria he used, different answers seemed plausible, although he finally preferred form Seventeenth-century philosophers, including Descartes, Spinoza and Leibniz, came to strikingly different solutions to the problem of what qualifies as being substance Locke's account seems to suggest an unknowable substratum which falls out of any account of knowledge, but it can also be seen to offer a corpuscular substrate linked to his doctrine of primary qualities and their explanatory role in science
What underlies the various qualities of an object In the later tradition substance comes to be considered a transcendent notion
Same as Hypostasis, 2
The basis weight of certain grades of paper For example, 20 lb bond is also called substance 20 or sub 20
– the amount of thickness between the veins, to the touch, of a fully expanded leaf blade