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Answer for the clue "The state of existing in reality ", 11 letters:
subsistence

Alternative clues for the word subsistence

Word definitions for subsistence in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE basic ▪ Now this basic means of subsistence for between 50,000 and 100,000 urban migrants has been outlawed. ▪ Most people have considerable leeway as to how they spend their money over and above basic subsistence ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Subsistence \Sub*sist"ence\, n. [Cf. F. subsistance, L. subsistentia.] Real being; existence. Not only the things had subsistence, but the very images were of some creatures existing. --Stillingfleet. Inherency; as, the subsistence of qualities in bodies. ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 Real being; existence. 2 inherency; as, the subsistence of qualities in bodies. 3 something (food, water, money, etc.) that is required to stay alive. 4 (context theology English) embodiment or personification or hypostasis of an underlying principle ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. minimal (or marginal) resources for subsisting; "social security provided only a bare subsistence" a means of surviving; "farming is a hard means of subsistence" the state of existing in reality; having substance

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
early 15c., "existence, independence," from Late Latin subsistentia "substance, reality," in Medieval Latin also "stability," from Latin subsistens , present participle of subsistere "stand still or firm" (see subsist ). Latin subsistentia is a loan-translation ...

Usage examples of subsistence.

The prayers of the Goths were granted, and their service was accepted by the Imperial court: and orders were immediately despatched to the civil and military governors of the Thracian diocese, to make the necessary preparations for the passage and subsistence of a great people, till a proper and sufficient territory could be allotted for their future residence.

To all these improvements may be added an assiduous attention to mines and fisheries, which, by employing a multitude of laborious hands, serve to increase the pleasures of the rich and the subsistence of the poor.

During this transaction the ladies were conducted to a tavern not far off, where dinner was bespoke, that they might be at hand to see the effect of their charity, which was not confined to what we have already described, but extended so far, that, in a little time, the apartment was comfortably furnished, and the young creature provided with change of apparel, and money to procure the necessaries of subsistence.

Capitalism in crisis, however, forces the bourgeoisie to drive down wages to below subsistence levels, to force the worker into a semi-slave existence.

Second, this is the average across the entire population, and what it fails to reveal is that for some sectors of the Iraqi population the drop took them well below subsistence level, producing malnutrition and starvation.

He intrenched himself in a fortified camp between Edinburgh and Leith, and took care to remove from the counties of Merse and the Lothians every thing which could serve to the subsistence of the English army.

Wine-red heather and glowing golden gorse and great armadas of cloud sailing serenely overhead, while mountainy men struggled with all their might to wring bare subsistence from unyielding earth.

Too proud to plead for the charity of these intransigent in-laws, she was depositing everything he had left her to prepay the raising of their daughter in the style to which she should be entitled: the fact that she herself would thus be forced to take any menial job for her own subsistence was not to cloud the childhood of Denise.

The first trading city in the world was abundantly replenished with the means of subsistence and defence.

This imposition lay heavy on the gentry, who were obliged, many of them, to retrench their expenses and dismiss their servants, in order to enable them to comply with her demands: and as these servants, accustomed to idleness, and having no means of subsistence, commonly betook themselves to theft and robbery, the queen published a proclamation, by which she obliged their former masters to take them back to their service.

And so the Thrifty Food Plan failed to answer the question that still fascinated me: What is the absolutely cheapest subsistence diet, and can it be turned into something palatable?

American diet, even when scaled down into the USD As Thrifty Food Plan, seems ill prepared to cope with subsistence in a delicious way.

Latins who traded in the Black Sea, and perhaps to annihilate the subsistence of the city.

It was evident, however, that any unnecessary delay here would have been very imprudent, as Fort Chipewyan did not, at the present time, furnish the means of subsistence for so large a party, much less was there a prospect of our receiving any supply to carry us forward.

We invite and desire that the nobility, archbishops, bishops, abbeys, convents, seignories, magistrates, and inhabitants of the republic of Poland, on the road to Posnania, and beyond it, would repair in person or by deputies, in the course of this week, or as soon after as possible, to the Prussian head-quarters, there to treat with the commander-in-chief, or the commissary at war, for the delivery of forage and provisions for the subsistence of the army, to be paid for with ready money.