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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
retention
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
fluid
▪ Elimination: problems may manifest as constipation, fluid retention, congested skin, catarrh. 4.
▪ Addition of solute causes a rise in tonicity with stimulation of both thirst and antidiuretic hormone release. Fluid retention ensues.
▪ Most of us tend to eat far too much, which can lead to fluid retention.
▪ It is characterized by escalating blood pressure, protein in the urine and fluid retention in the extremities.
▪ Twenty minutes later Slendertone pads were placed on Santa's fattest points to break down fluid retention.
▪ Don't sleep in an overheated room as this can cause fluid retention in your face and bags under the eyes.
▪ Calorie-free fluids do not add to body fat, hinder weight loss or cause fluid retention in those of normal health.
■ NOUN
interval
▪ This effect, however, appears to interact with retention interval in a way that is not necessarily consistent with repression interpretations.
▪ This interaction between arousal and retention interval does appear to be robust.
▪ When this was the case there was an interaction between retention interval and interpolated parking episodes.
rate
▪ By using panel survey methods, the recruitment and retention rates of members can be tracked over time.
▪ So in 1990, School &038; Main launched an ambitious initiative to improve college retention rates for young people called Higher Ground.
▪ A.. Watch customer loyalty, retention rates, share of purchases.
water
▪ Reduce your intake of salt, sugar and junk foods - especially beneficial if you suffer from water retention.
▪ He also tries traditional medications for pain, water retention, anxiety and hypoglycemia.
▪ Bingeing on carbohydrates also causes water retention and therefore temporary weight gain.
▪ The decrease in sodium reabsorption by the renal tubules will be accompanied by decreased chloride and water retention.
▪ Without the topsoil, water retention is negligible.
▪ Without water retention the land becomes baked.
▪ When renal failure supervenes with sodium and water retention contributing significantly to hypertension, then a diuretic may be particularly useful.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ One of the side effects of the drug is water retention.
▪ powers of retention
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Most of us tend to eat far too much, which can lead to fluid retention.
▪ The approach increased retention by about 15 percent over what it otherwise would have been.
▪ Without the topsoil, water retention is negligible.
▪ Without water retention the land becomes baked.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Retention

Retention \Re*ten"tion\, n. [L. retentio: cf. F. r['e]tention. See Retain.]

  1. The act of retaining, or the state of being ratined.

  2. The power of retaining; retentiveness.

    No woman's heart So big, to hold so much; they lack retention.
    --Shak.

  3. That which contains something, as a tablet; a ???? of preserving impressions. [R.]
    --Shak.

  4. The act of withholding; retraint; reserve.
    --Shak.

  5. Place of custody or confinement.

  6. (Law) The right of withholding a debt, or of retaining property until a debt due to the person claiming the right be duly paid; a lien.
    --Erskine. Craig.

    Retention cyst (Med.), a cyst produced by obstruction of a duct leading from a secreting organ and the consequent retention of the natural secretions.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
retention

late 14c., from Latin retentionem (nominative retentio) "a retaining, a holding back," noun of action from past participle stem of retinere (see retain). Originally medical; mental sense is from late 15c.

Wiktionary
retention

n. 1 The act of retaining or something retained 2 The act or power of remembering things 3 A memory; what is retained in the mind 4 (context medicine English) The involuntary withholding of urine and faeces 5 (context obsolete English) That which contains something, as a tablet; a means of preserving impressions. 6 (context obsolete English) The act of withholding; restraint; reserve. 7 (context obsolete English) A place of custody or confinement. 8 (context legal English) The right to withhold a debt, or of retaining property until a debt due to the person claiming the right is duly paid; a lien.

WordNet
retention
  1. n. the act of keeping in your possession [syn: keeping, holding]

  2. the power of retaining and recalling past experience; "he had a good memory when he was younger" [syn: memory, retentiveness]

  3. the power of retaining liquid; "moisture retentivity of soil" [syn: retentiveness, retentivity]

Wikipedia
Retention

Retention may refer to:

Usage examples of "retention".

The third was retention enema, using a double Bardex, with me on the table in the knee to chest position.

It would have been an entirely intimidating personage if not for the retention, albeit furless, of grossly oversize ears.

In spite of this, however, they are in great part dependent on the absorption of water through the general surface of the shoot, and the power of rapid imbibition possessed by their cell-walls, the crowded position of the small leaves on the stem, and special adaptations for the retention of water on the surface, have the same significance as in the foliose liverworts.

Indeed, the particular cause of the differences was easy enough to identify: it was neoteny, the retention into adulthood of childhood characteristics.

I have to take a dozen different drugs to prevent reabsorption of calcium from my bone, collapse of my circulatory system, fluid retention, all the bad stuff micro-gravity does to unedited Earth stock.

But when this period arrives and the menstrual discharge takes place into the vagina, the female will suffer from the retention and accumulation of this secretion, and ultimately a tumor or a protrusion of the membrane which closes the vagina will occur, giving rise to severe pain and other serious symptoms.

Thanks to your ascension to full Reigning Masterhood and my retention of title, we have entered a new, unprecedented age.

Retention of the menses may result from malformation of the vaginal canal, which sometimes terminates before it reaches the womb, being simply a short, closed sac.

The late-seventeenth-century observer Thomas Morer believed that retention of the maiden name implied that Scottish women were more independent of their husbands than was the case in England.

Sodium retention can contribute to PMS headaches, bloating, edema, and fluid weight gain during the premenstrual phase of your cycle.

Harsh, dry, yellow skin, purpuric spots with ecchymoses under the skin and mucous membranes, retention or suppression of urine, delirium, convulsions, coma, and death.

There is an instance recorded of the death of a fetus occurring near term, its retention and subsequent discharge being through a spontaneous opening in the abdominal wall one or two months after.

The prominent symptoms of retroflexion of the uterus are a sense of weight in the region of the rectum, difficulty in evacuating the bowels, and, sometimes a retention of the feces.

The municipality assumes no more direct responsibility for the due devotion of the Stadt-Theater to dramatic art than is implied in its retention of reversionary rights of ownership.

There is also the question of broadscale work in the area of water retention that can be done as restoration projects.