involution
Entanglement; a spiralling inwards; intricacy.
Noun
- Entanglement; a spiralling inwards; intricacy.
- […]usually his attention was diverted from her feet by her shrieks of laughter and the astounding involutions of her huge brown-yellow frame. - 1938, Xavier Herbert, chapter V, in Capricornia, page 74:
- ‘Gomez,’ said the mortician, ‘is an expert only on the involutions of his own rectum.’ - 1968, Anthony Burgess, “Enderby Outside”, in The Complete Enderby, published 2002, page 302:
- A complicated grammatical construction.
- 1917, James Huneker, Unicorns, New York: Scribner, Chapter 11 “Style and Rhythm in English Prose,” p. 129, Walter Pater’s essay on Style is honeycombed with involutions and preciosity.
- An endofunction whose square is equal to the identity function; a function equal to its inverse.
- Involutions have the property that they are their own inverses. - 1996, Alfred J. Menezesm, Paul C. van Oorschot, Scott A. Vanstone, Handbook of Applied Cryptography, CRC Press, page 10:
Hyponyms: complex conjugation complementation
- The shrinking of an organ (such as the uterus) to a former size.
- The regressive changes in the body occurring with old age.
- A power: the result of raising one number to the power of another.
- A cessation of development or progress involving intense inner competition.
- A state of increased competition for limited resources, requiring great effort to stay ahead.
- The migration of a cell layer inward, sliding over an outer layer of cells. It occurs at gastrulation during embryogenesis.
Origin
From Latin involūtiō, from involvō.