The Collaborative International Dictionary
Operance \Op"er*ance\, Operancy \Op"er*an*cy\, n. The act of operating or working; operation. [R.]
Usage examples of "operancy".
Greg-Donnet says that metapsychic operancy is an autosomal dominant with full penetrance.
But as we know, operancy must be combined with ethnic dynamism if coadunation of the Mind is to be achieved.
I suppose things like liquor, drugs, fatigue, illness they'd all have an adverse effect on operancy, wouldn't they?
It was crammed with latent metafunctions that might, in due time, be coaxed into operancy.
The Tanu wear mind-amplifiers, collars called golden tores, to bring their powers up to operancy.
The Tanu wear mind-amplifiers, collars called golden torcs, to bring their powers up to operancy.
They would acknowledge their operancy in support of the idealistic proposal of their fellow researchers, and when they did my own protective coloration would be destroyed.
Sometimes latents were spontaneously raised to operancy by severe psychic trauma, but the more usual means involved specialized therapy by meta preĀ.
All of the well-worn psychoenergetic circuits leading from the torc would have to be rerouted through the syncytial mazes of the right cortex, reeducated to operancy within the refining flame of the ultimate pain that the universe could inflict upon a thinking, feeling creature.