Find the word definition

Crossword clues for complementary

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
complementary
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
alternative/complementary medicine (=medical treatments that are not part of modern medicine)
▪ Various types of alternative medicine, particularly acupuncture, can give pain relief.
complementary colours (=ones that look nice together)
▪ Plant the flowers in patches in complementary colours.
complementary medicine
▪ acupuncture and other types of complementary medicines
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
as
▪ Tonight we are given the foot washing as complementary symbol or metaphor.
▪ The drawing and the birdwatching had grown up as complementary interests from a very young age.
▪ But surely it would be more appropriate to see the two perspectives as complementary.
▪ They neglect the efforts of those who have regarded scientific and religious discourse as complementary rather than mutually exclusive.
▪ It is a group in which the contributions of individuals are seen as complementary.
▪ They should be seen as complementary contributions to the wider management of our transport, environmental and social objectives.
■ NOUN
medicine
▪ The rift between conventional and complementary medicine has had many harmful effects.
▪ The practices of complementary medicine fall roughly into the following categories: 1.
▪ So why is complementary medicine gaining popularity?
▪ In my view, scientists have a crucial role to play in the rapprochement of conventional and complementary medicine.
▪ Such developments are paving the way to rapprochement between conventional and complementary medicine.
▪ Most forms of complementary medicine are framed in terms of traditional medical systems from other cultures.
▪ Today many physicians admit that complementary medicine has some potential and deserves a fair trial.
product
▪ Their area of expertise includes complementary products such as pension plans and insurance policies.
role
▪ Settlement policies have a complementary role, in that they affect the distribution of employment, services and housing within rural areas.
▪ That's where there is a complementary role for equity and senior bank debt to create a properly structured entity.
▪ At the same time, the complementary role of oral culture is encouraged in a myriad of ways.
therapy
▪ This is not to say that complementary therapies act only at the psychological level.
▪ Anyone who has actually experienced acupuncture, or several other complementary therapies, will agree on this.
▪ Pharmacological studies also indicate that these two forms of complementary therapy act through different pathways.
▪ When a complementary therapy is shown to work, further questions arise.
▪ Finding a therapist to help you Many complementary therapies exist which are concerned with holistic healing.
▪ Yoga also highlights the need for investigating the preventive as well as the curative effects of complementary therapies.
▪ Harlow degree majors include counselling, psychology and complementary therapies.
▪ The second type are called complementary therapies.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Bain and McCaskill have complementary skills - she is creative while he is highly organized.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Already complementary technology agreements have been made among local firms to support these ambitions.
▪ But it needs complementary mechanisms for counselling, transmission of experience, management expertise, financial support, upskilling programmes.
▪ But these two sides were not only complementary, they were in conflict.
▪ Can the combination of both inward and outward investment be made complementary to rather than a substitute for domestic investment?
▪ It is, therefore, the complementary life form to the animals of Earth.
▪ The definition of a liability is complementary to that of an asset.
▪ This is not to say that complementary therapies act only at the psychological level.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Complementary

Complementary \Com`ple*men"ta*ry\, a. Serving to fill out or to complete; as, complementary numbers.

Complementary colors. See under Color.

Complementary angles (Math.), two angles whose sum is 90[deg].

Complementary

Complementary \Com`ple*men"ta*ry\, n. [See Complimentary.] One skilled in compliments. [Obs.]
--B. Jonson.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
complementary

1620s, "ceremonious," from complement + -ary. Sense "forming a complement" attested from 1829, earliest in complementary colors.

Wiktionary
complementary

a. 1 Acting as a complement. 2 (context genetics English) Of the specific pairings of the bases in DNA and RNA. 3 (context physics English) Pertaining to pairs of properties in quantum mechanics that are inversely related to each other, such as speed and position, or energy and time. (See also Heisenberg uncertainty principle.) n. 1 A complementary colour. 2 (context obsolete English) One skilled in compliments.

WordNet
complementary

n. either one of two chromatic colors that when mixed together give white (in the case of lights) or gray (in the case of pigments); "yellow and blue are complementaries" [syn: complementary color]

complementary
  1. adj. acting as or providing a complement (something that completes the whole) [syn: complemental, completing]

  2. of words or propositions so related that each is the negation of the other; "`male' and `female' are complementary terms"

  3. of or relating to or suggestive of complementation; "interchangeable electric outlets" [syn: interchangeable, reciprocal]

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "complementary".

The colors reversed into complementary tones for a few insane seconds, overcorrected, and then suddenly were normal.

Scholars often visit Usenet in their pursuit of complementary knowledge or expert advice.

He took their ultrasophisticated digital encryption algorithms, with complementary hardware and software, to the master communicators at the Pentagon, the Defense Communications Agency, the National Security Agency, and the White House Communications Agency.

She gets a a warm sense of accomplishment whenever she considers how complementary their abilities are: how much of a mess he was in before he met her for the second time, eyes meeting across a microsat launcher in an abandoned supermarket outside London.

I have never before seenwhatsix, perhaps seven warrens all unleashed at once, all intricately bound together in such complementary fashion.

Both unite in making the thrust of life divide in more and more diverging but complementary directions, each emphasising some distinct aspect of its original wealth.

If intelligence accepts the risk of taking the leap into the phosphorescent fluid which bathes it, and to which it is not altogether foreign, since it has broken off from it and in it dwell the complementary powers of the understanding, intelligence will soon become adapted and so will only be lost for a moment to reappear greater, stronger, and of fuller content.

As a rule they go in pairs, in antithetic couples, every analysis being dichotomy, since the discernment of one path of abstraction determines in contrast, as a complementary remainder, the opposite path of direction.

But I will borrow from Mr Bergson himself a few complementary explanations, in order, as far as possible, to forestall any misunderstanding.

Along these different paths the complementary potentialities are produced and intensified, separating in the very process, their original interpretation being possible only in the state of birth.

In it reside certain complementary powers of the understanding, of which we have only a confused feeling when we remain shut up in ourselves, but which will become illumined and distinct when they perceive themselves at work, so to speak, in the evolution of nature.

We have been complementary for an honorable time, and our ancesstral liness require implementation of the formality before we die.

They were complementary in one sense, true, yet the difference in weight would challenge anyone who sought to fight using both at the same time.

There were also several books which instructed the reader that peace of mind of the sort possessed by great saints could be achieved by five minutes of daily contemplation, and two or three complementary books which explained that worry, heart disease, hardening of the arteries, taedium cordis and despair could all be avoided by relaxing the muscles.

Why should we have two different, accurate and complementary modes of thinking which are so poorly integrated with each other?