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autonomous
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
autonomous
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
as
▪ There is thus a connection between people's private fantasies and their status as autonomous individuals.
▪ The company's hotels are run as autonomous units, and their operations are only co-ordinated to a limited extent.
▪ Not treating women as autonomous, in pornographic love-making, has the consequence of reinforcing women's subordination.
▪ Modernism is seen not as autonomous, but as part of a wider culture.
▪ For our present purpose, however, it is sufficient to note that he did not describe the physical world as autonomous.
largely
▪ Each sub-committee is largely autonomous in its handling of a document which has been sifted to it.
▪ In respect to day-to-day operations, teams would be largely autonomous.
more
▪ The state, for Fine and Harris, is more autonomous than in Soviet orthodoxy, although they remain instrumentalists.
▪ You become, to that extent, a potentially more autonomous individual.
▪ This leads to a more autonomous role for the Family Development Nurse and a greater input into decision and policy-making.
relatively
▪ The field of artistic production is, like other fields, relatively autonomous from the social field.
▪ The purpose is to realise a specific set of values, through an emergent creative and relatively autonomous process.
▪ Note here that Weber's religious field was also only relatively autonomous.
▪ However, even this view of relatively autonomous, locally based development shares some of the same themes as those identified above.
▪ The conjuncture of these two relatively autonomous processes, it was argued, has been central to the development of sports medicine.
▪ Alternatively the state may be relatively autonomous of the capitalist mode of production, which is appropriate for a functionalist approach.
■ NOUN
government
▪ The key element in the Basque Country was its autonomous government.
group
▪ Secondly, some forms of work design - autonomous group work in particular - appear to threaten traditional managerial decision-making prerogatives.
▪ Management action involved a package of changes, necessary to support a considerable increase in worker control through autonomous groups.
▪ Prior to the technical innovations by the Coal Board, miners had been used to working in small autonomous groups or teams.
house
▪ In energy terms, the goal of the autonomous house is to eliminate fossil-fuel use and the associated carbon dioxide emissions.
▪ It is an autonomous house, not the autonomous house.
▪ The temperature in the living room ofthe autonomous house was measured initially during the winter of1994-95.
▪ Before investigating the design of the autonomous house it is worth asking why the authors elected to design a house.
▪ Logically, an autonomous house can not use mains electricity.
▪ The occupants of an autonomous house could not do this, because they would not have the resources to do so.
▪ In the autonomous house, the user can not pass the buck.
▪ No water Consumption figures could be found for the washing machine in the autonomous house.
man
▪ Internal control is presumably exerted not only by but for autonomous man.
▪ The analysis leaves less and less for autonomous man to do.
▪ Feelings are said to be part of the armamentarium of autonomous man, and some further comment is in order.
▪ Non-punitive contingencies generate the same behavior, but a person remains for autonomous man to do and receive credit for inner virtues.
▪ Traditional theories of autonomous man have exaggerated species differences.
▪ A scientific conception seems demeaning because nothing is eventually left for which autonomous man can take credit.
▪ But we have had to take advantage of a great deal of autonomous man.
▪ It is only autonomous man who has reached a dead end.
republic
▪ Congress delegates from South Ossetia and from the autonomous republic of Abkhazia boycotted the voting.
▪ Tuva, under the Soviet system, was always an autonomous republic.
▪ The Crimea had been an autonomous republic from 1921 to 1945.
▪ Each autonomous republic is represented by eleven deputies in the Soviet of Nationalities of the Supreme Soviet.
▪ Gorbachev, Yanayev and the presidents of the autonomous republics were also members of the Federation Council.
state
▪ For the rest of the time the parties are basically loose amalgamations of autonomous state parties.
unit
▪ The company's hotels are run as autonomous units, and their operations are only co-ordinated to a limited extent.
▪ Distributor Miramax, which led the pack with 20 nominations, is an autonomous unit of the Walt Disney Co.
▪ Decentralization into autonomous units will surely be even more critical than it is now.
▪ During the same period, Eastman Kodak reorganized into seventeen small, autonomous units.
▪ We were an autonomous unit, left well alone by the military hierarchy out there.
▪ If they were not, they were inherited as autonomous units.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ an autonomous region
▪ Andorra is autonomous, with its external affairs managed by both France and Spain.
▪ The councils, which are locally autonomous, act as courts for the whole area.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ An autonomous system would need to be able to respond rapidly.
▪ Because churches are autonomous, the denomination has no authority to limit the pulpit or deacon boards to men, he said.
▪ The love between man and wife, therefore, apparently presupposes man and wife treating one another as equal, autonomous beings.
▪ These powers will limit the extent to which men and women can be autonomous and equal in love-making.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Autonomous

Autonomous \Au*ton"o*mous\, a. [Gr. ?; ? self + ? to assign, hold, sway.]

  1. Independent in government; having the right or power of self-government.

  2. (Biol.) Having independent existence or laws.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
autonomous

1800, from Greek autonomos "having one's own laws," of animals, "feeding or ranging at will," from autos "self" (see auto-) + nomos "law" (see numismatics). Compare privilege. Used mostly in metaphysics and politics; see autonomic.

Wiktionary
autonomous

a. 1 Self-governing. Intelligent, sentient, self-aware, thinking, feeling, Governing independently. 2 Acting on one's own or independently; of a child, acting without being governed by parental or guardian rules. 3 (context Celtic linguistics of a verb form English) Used with no subject, indicating an unknown or unspecified agent; used in similar situations as the passive in English (the difference being that the theme in the English passive construction is the subject, while in the Celtic autonomous construction the theme is the object and there is no subject).

WordNet
autonomous
  1. adj. of political bodies; "an autonomous judiciary"; "a sovereign state" [syn: independent, self-governing, sovereign]

  2. existing as an independent entity; "the partitioning of India created two separate and autonomous jute economies"

  3. of persons; free from external control and constraint in e.g. action and judgment [syn: self-directed, self-reliant]

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "autonomous".

The light of our world can be allocated because it springs from a corporeal mass of known position, but conceive an immaterial entity, independent of body as being of earlier nature than all body, a nature firmly self-based or, better, without need of base: such a principle, incorporeal, autonomous, having no source for its rising, coming from no place, attached to no material mass, this cannot be allotted part here and part there: that would be to give it both a previous position and a present attachment.

The external environment in such a view is the cause, the evolved morphology, physiology, and behavior of the organism is the effect, and natural selection is the mechanism by which the autonomous external cause is translated into the effect.

In short, the paradigm shift is defined, at least initially, by the recognition that only an established power, overdetermined with respect to and relatively autonomous from the sovereign nation-states, is capable of functioning as the center of the new world order, exercising over it an effective regulation and, when necessary, coercion.

These two sets of visceral fibers, the preganglionic and the postganglionic, taken together with the ganglia themselves, make up that portion of the nervous system which is autonomous or, not under the control of the will.

As, at least in neuroscience, the theoretical limitations of naive reductionism become increasingly apparent, and cold-war suspicions recede into history, the time is ripe for the autonomous Soviet tradition in neurophysiology and psychology to be reassimilated into a more integrated and Universalists neuroscience.

For nearly 600 years, between the collapse of the Abbasid Empire in the thirteenth century and the waning years of the Ottoman era in the late nineteenth century, government authority was tenuous and tribal Iraq was, in effect, autonomous.

A Central Planning Council, on which he sat, determined the proper economic mix and crops grown, coordinating with other Anchors as well, but otherwise the farms were communally held and run affairs, autonomous and sharing in the profits by getting what they wanted or needed from other communes in exchange for what they produced.

Which is to say that the forces at work seem ever more impersonal, more disconnected from individual human activity, more autonomous.

Rather, as the old filth and gloomy sickness were cleared away, there would emerge a larger, stronger, older, brainier, better-nourished, better-oxygenated, more vital human type, able to eat and drink sanely, perfectly autonomous and well regulated in desires, going nude while attending tranquilly to duties, performing his fascinating and useful mental work.

Reverence for the Cave Bear was the common factor that united them, the force that welded all the separate autonomous clans into one people, the Clan of the Cave Bear.

Islamic government as an autonomous, khedival province of the Ottoman Empire.

Their midcourse maneuver had put them slightly ahead for now, and my hopes for getting permission for an autonomous catch-up burn were about nil.

In November 1945, university students in Tokyo, Kyoto, Nagoya, and Kyushu began establishing autonomous student federations that laid the basis for the postwar student movement.

As, at least in neuroscience, the theoretical limitations of naive reductionism become increasingly apparent, and cold-war suspicions recede into history, the time is ripe for the autonomous Soviet tradition in neurophysiology and psychology to be reassimilated into a more integrated and Universalists neuroscience.

In short, the paradigm shift is defined, at least initially, by the recognition that only an established power, overdetermined with respect to and relatively autonomous from the sovereign nation-states, is capable of functioning as the center of the new world order, exercising over it an effective regulation and, when necessary, coercion.