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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
conjuncture
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Are we able to test claims, for example, about the way the state mediates between classes in a particular conjuncture?
▪ More emphasis should be placed on this conjuncture of forces than on the strike record.
▪ Revolution was on the agenda, in the sense that there were conjunctures of objectively revolutionary situations.
▪ Science in this sense came to stand as a meta-discourse, framed by the broader contours of the conjuncture.
▪ The conjuncture of these two relatively autonomous processes, it was argued, has been central to the development of sports medicine.
▪ The same theory may take on quite different political, moral and even existential meanings according to particular circumstances of context and conjuncture.
▪ These were themselves deeply implicated in the political and intellectual struggles of the conjuncture before the First War.
▪ We also need to look at the wider political conjuncture.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Conjuncture

Conjuncture \Con*junc"ture\ (?; 135), n. [Cf. F. conjoncture, LL. conjunctura.]

  1. The act of joining, or state of being joined; union; connection; combination.

    The conjuncture of philosophy and divinity.
    --Hobbes.

    A fit conjuncture or circumstances.
    --Addison.

  2. A crisis produced by a combination of circumstances; complication or combination of events or circumstances; plight resulting from various conditions.

    He [Chesterfield] had recently governed Ireland, at a momentous conjuncture, with eminent firmness, wisdom, and humanity.
    --Macaulay.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
conjuncture

c.1600, from French conjoncture (16c.), from Modern Latin *conjunctura, from Latin coniunctus (see conjunct).

Wiktionary
conjuncture

n. 1 A combination of events or circumstances; a conjunction; a union. 2 A set of circumstances causing a crisis; a juncture.

WordNet
conjuncture

n. a critical combination of events or circumstances

Usage examples of "conjuncture".

The vassal was here more powerful than his liege lord: the situation which had enabled Hugh Capet to depose the Carlovingian princes, seemed to be renewed, and that with much greater advantages on the side of the vassal: and when England was added to so many provinces, the French king had reason to apprehend, from this conjuncture, some great disaster to himself and to his family.

This is the mode in which they manage these things, and succeed in Eastern climes, where there are grave and phlegmatic persons who care very little for the questions of time in conjunctures of importance.

But as we know, perceiving that the situation of affairs, like all uncertain conjunctures, offered manifestly an opportunity for speculation, he was, perhaps, desirous, like our old friend, Sindbad, of that gleam of light which might show him the gold and precious stones with which the floor of the catacomb was strewn.

He needed all her assistance and all her loyalty in these new conjunctures his fatalism had already accepted.

Ferdinand, for example, who, by the authority derived to him from the injunctions of the old Count, sometimes took upon himself the office of an adviser, cunningly chose to counsel the son at those conjunctures when he knew him least able to bear such expostulation.

Often I tried to reason my way out of this conjuncture of fear and stone-weight.

Could he be certain that some conjuncture would not occur which would bring the mysterious personage on the scene?

At no special conjuncture of his life, at no period which could be marked with the finger of the observer, did he glaringly abstain from any statement which at the moment might be natural.

This system alone includes all those social conditions and those general and diverse feelings, the simultaneous conjuncture and activity of which constitute for us at the present day the spectacle of human things.

Oldtower, with his accustomed gravity, accompanied by a not unbecoming modesty, said, that in this conjuncture, and being personally unacquainted with both Mr.

And since in this famous fishery, each mate or headsman, like a Gothic Knight of old, is always accompanied by his boat-steerer or harpooneer, who in certain conjunctures provides him with a fresh lance, when the former one has been badly twisted, or elbowed in the assault.

Take our thanks: we read that this conjuncture undesigned I "Unfolds felicitous means of showing you that still our eyes are set, as yours, on peace, II "To which great end the Treaty of Amiens must be the groundwork of our amities.