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canonical
[ kuh-non-i-kuhl ]
adjective
- relating to, established by, or conforming to a canon or canons
- included in the canon of the Bible.
- authorized; recognized; accepted:
canonical works.
- Mathematics. (of an equation, coordinate, etc.) in simplest or standard form.
- following the pattern of a musical canon.
- Linguistics. (of a form or pattern) characteristic, general or basic:
the canonical form of the past tense;
a canonical syllable pattern.
noun
- canonicals, garments prescribed by canon law for clergy when officiating.
canonical
/ 办蓹藞苍蓲苍瑟办蓹濒 /
adjective
- belonging to or included in a canon of sacred or other officially recognized writings
- belonging to or in conformity with canon law
- according to recognized law; accepted
- music in the form of a canon
- of or relating to a cathedral chapter
- of or relating to a canon (clergyman)
Derived Forms
- 肠补藞苍辞苍颈肠补濒濒测, adverb
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 肠补路苍辞苍顎僫路肠补濒路濒测 adverb
- 蝉耻顎卲别谤路肠补路苍辞苍顎僫路肠补濒 adjective
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of canonical1
Example Sentences
But I knew Joyce and I would have to have another rendezvous when I wasn鈥檛 in such a rush to check a canonical box.
The "hobbling" scene鈥攕he uses a sledgehammer to break Paul鈥檚 ankles鈥攅levated her to canonical b***h status: a cunning, brutal and mercurial harridan who hides her malice behind a folksy fa莽ade.
The first 鈥淓yes,鈥 which premiered on PBS in 1987, was created by Henry Hampton and is a canonical work of not just the civil rights movement but also the docuseries format.
Of course, the one hiccup in this is that there have been multiple seasons of canonical comics since the show went off the air in 2003.
Will music begin to see more 鈥渓ost鈥 projects or canonical recordings revisited and altered, now up for new Grammy acclaim?
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