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Answer for the clue "Any small intracellular body found within another (characteristic of certain diseases) ", 9 letters:
inclusion

Alternative clues for the word inclusion

Word definitions for inclusion in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context countable English) An addition or annex to a group, set, or total. 2 (context uncountable English) The act of include, i.e. adding or annexing, (something) to a group, set, or total. 3 (context countable English) Anything foreign that is included ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
c.1600, from Latin inclusionem (nominative inclusio ) "a shutting up, confinement," noun of action from past participle stem of includere (see include ).

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Inclusion \In*clu"sion\, n. [L. inclusio: cf. F. inclusion. See Include .] The act of including, or the state of being included; limitation; restriction; as, the lines of inclusion of his policy. --Sir W. Temple. Something that is included. (Min.) A foreign ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
In logic and mathematics , inclusion is the concept that all the contents of one object are also contained within a second object. The modern symbol for inclusion first appears in Gergonne (1816), who defines it as one idea 'containing' or being 'contained' ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. the state of being included [ant: exclusion ] the relation of comprising something; "he admired the inclusion of so many ideas in such a short work" [syn: comprehension ] any small intracellular body found within another (characteristic of certain diseases); ...

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE social ▪ No project for social inclusion will work unless it captures some of the winners' gains and redirects them to the losers. ▪ A submission has been made to the Minister for Social Welfare for inclusion in ...

Usage examples of inclusion.

Consequently, this is the mind-set that prompted in 1984 the active inclusion of forensic pathology in the criminal profiling activities of the Behavioral Science Unit at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia.

In addition to the inclusion of these national brands, the company very intelligently decided to create its own brands.

The double inclusion of his donjuanesque questioning of time, which is both a principle of writing and a thematic goal, creates a fascinating synthesis of the novel where, as we have seen many times, the esthetic, ethical, erotic and historical functions combine in a single existential flow.

The most distinctive feature of this work, as of all literary or artistic diaries of the Heian period, is the inclusion of a large number of poems.

The English version is noteworthy for its inclusion of the skilful renderings of the ancient hymns by J.

I do not have any magic formula according to which ideas have been chosen for inclusion in this book.

And while such a nucleic acid may not be linked to the life of its microsphere by anything , more than its inclusion, it and its protein partner will be passed on through all succeeding generations of microspheres.

The autoscribe pinned to his collar caught the words as he spoke and stored them for inclusion in his next report to the no-longer-hidden Resurgency on Eraasi.

Nor is a railroad bridge company unconstitutionally deprived of its property when, in the absence of proof that the addition will not yield a reasonable return, it is ordered to widen its bridge by inclusion of a pathway for pedestrians and a roadway for vehicles.

Apart from the question of the legitimacy of the Greek dating of the sack, which seems to be at variance with the Roman data itself, the Varronian dates were thrown off by four years through the inclusion both of these desperate attempts to bring the list into conformity with the Greek dating of the sack.

It took time to develop a sense that nodules in one location were better, fresher, less subject to inclusions of foreign materials, than stones from a different location.

I suppose that this could be annoying to purists of both persuasions, who may feel that I am spoiling an otherwise acceptable science fiction story with the inclusion of the unexplained, or that I am violating the purity of a fantasy by causing its wonders to conform to too rational a set of strictures.

The planets in all the other starfields explored are too widely dispersed for useful inclusion in Cluster civilization.

There was a saying among the brothers that even the fall of a sparrow was worthy of inclusion in their graphs, the graphs that charted the passage of past events and from which the brothers made their predictions for the future.

He also viewed it as a means of self-preservation, thinking once he became a member of a team or fraternity, his inclusion in that elite clique would at the very least preclude him from being abused by outsiders.