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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
gradation
noun
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The film can display over 4000 gradations of color.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Everyone inside knows or speculates endlessly on the politics of power implicit in the most minute gradations of change.
▪ National horticultural markets have wide variations in price, seasonal effects, methods of selling and quality gradations.
▪ Sometimes the gradation is clear, and sometimes less so, but order nested within order is all around.
▪ The class hierarchy is alive and well in the gradations through the 250 different decorations which the Crown awards.
▪ The construction of a gradation scheme is clearly no simple task.
▪ With sandgrouse it lies in a delicate gradation of one muted tone into another.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Gradation

Gradation \Gra*da"tion\, n., [L. gradatio: cf. F. gradation. See Grade.]

  1. The act of progressing by regular steps or orderly arrangement; the state of being graded or arranged in ranks; as, the gradation of castes.

  2. The act or process of bringing to a certain grade.

  3. Any degree or relative position in an order or series.

    The several gradations of the intelligent universe.
    --I. Taylor.

  4. (Fine Arts) A gradual passing from one tint to another or from a darker to a lighter shade, as in painting or drawing.

    6. (Mus.) A diatonic ascending or descending succession of chords.

Gradation

Gradation \Gra*da"tion\, v. t. To form with gradations. [R.]

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
gradation

1530s, "climax," from Middle French gradation (16c.) and directly from Latin gradationem (nominative gradatio) "ascent by steps, a climax," noun of action from gradus "step, degree" (see grade (n.)). Meaning "gradual change" is from 1540s. Related: Gradational.

Wiktionary
gradation

n. 1 A sequence of gradual, successive stages; a systematic progression. 2 A passing by small degrees from one tone or shade, as of color, to another. See Synonyms at nuance. 3 The act of gradate or arranging in grades. 4 Any degree or relative position in an order or series. 5 (context countable English) A calibration marking. 6 (context music English) A gradual change within one parameter, or an overlapping of two blocks of sound. 7 (context phonetics English) apophony. vb. (context transitive English) To form with gradations.

WordNet
gradation
  1. n. relative position in a graded series; "always a step behind"; "subtle gradations in color"; "keep in step with the fashions" [syn: step]

  2. a degree of ablaut [syn: grade]

  3. the act of arranging in grades [syn: graduation]

Wikipedia
Gradation

Gradation may refer to:

  • Ordering by some type of grade
  • Gradation (music)
  • Gradation in color, a gradual change between hues, tones, or shades
  • Calibration markings
  • Apophony or ablaut, in linguistics, often involving the gradation of vowels
  • Consonant gradation
  • Comparison (grammar), the gradation of adjectives and adverbs
  • Production of a graded algebra
Gradation (art)

Gradation in art is a visual technique of gradually transitioning from one colour hue to another, or from one shade to another, or one texture to another. Space, distance, atmosphere, volume, and curved or rounded forms are some of the visual effects created with gradation. Artists use a variety of methods to create gradation, depending upon the art medium, and the precise desired effect. Blending, shading, hatching and crosshatching are common methods. A fading effect can be created with pastels by using a torchon.

Usage examples of "gradation".

Apart from the requirements of a gradation of ranks, or the consequences of a conquest, the multitude delight to surround their chiefs with privileges--whether it be that their vanity makes them thus to aggrandize one of their own creations, or whether they try to conceal the humiliation of subjection by exaggerating the importance of those who rule them.

This deadly and incoherent mixture of treason and magic, of poison and adultery, afforded infinite gradations of guilt and innocence, of excuse and aggravation, which in these proceedings appear to have been confounded by the angry or corrupt passions of the judges.

As I looked from the albergo I could see a gradation of colours, from the purple red to the deepest of sea blue, rising like an immense tent from the dark green of the trees and the fields, here and there dotted with little white houses, with their red roofs, while in front the Luzzara Tower rose majestically in the twilight.

The young men of the town were mainly gathered at the corners, in distinctive groups, which expressed various shades and lines of chumship, and had little to do with any social gradations.

The simplest way of making a gradation from strong to pale colour is to dip one corner of a broad brush into the colour and the other corner into water so that the water just runs into the colour: then, by squeezing the whole width of the brush broadly between the thumb and forefinger so that most of the water is squeezed out, the brush is left charged with a tint gradated from side to side.

This effect is often seen at the top of the sky in a Japanese landscape print where a dark blue band of colour is printed with a soft edge suddenly gradated to white, or sometimes the plumage of birds is printed with sudden gradations.

Cullen, had the advantage of having passed through the gradations of surgery and pharmacy, and by study and practice had attained to such skill, that my father settled on him two hundred pounds a year for five years, and fifty pounds a year during his life, as an honorarium to secure his particular attendance.

There were no brushstrokes, there was an infinite gradation of density, and the image was a surface phenomenon only with no imbibition, meaning no fluid of any kind was involved.

He finds an ascending series in abnormal psychology from neuropathic states to mediumship with gradations which intensify the abnormal or the supernormal, but in which the continuity of development is never broken.

And next vnto them a confection, of the iuice of Lymons tempered with fine Sugar, the seedes of Pines, Rose water, Muske, Saffron, and choyce Synamon, and thus were all the sawces made with conuenient gradation and deliuery.

But it must be considered that all the good gained by this through the gradation of alehouse-keeper, brewer, maltster, and farmer, is overbalanced by the evil caused to the man and his family by his getting drunk.

So that we might obtain the parent-species and its several modified descendants from the lower and upper beds of a formation, and unless we obtained numerous transitional gradations, we should not recognise their relationship, and should consequently be compelled to rank them all as distinct species.

The modulations of the noises of wind and water, the infinite gradations and complexes of sound to be heard on the planisphere, seemed to ask him to include them, to become conscious of them and reproduce them.

He presupposed a progressive gradation, an unbroken process of improvement, an uninterrupted continuum of beings which could form themselves upon one another.

At the one side all is one point of unbroken rest, on the other is the ceaseless process, leaf and fruit, all the things of process carrying ever within themselves the Reason-Principles of the Upper Sphere, and striving to become trees in their own minor order and producing, if at all, only what is in strict gradation from themselves.