rectification

Etymology
From, from , from.

Noun

 * 1) The action or process of rectifying.
 * 2) * 1847,, Secret Societies, originally published in parts in Tait's Edinburgh Magazine, reprinted in 1863, Thomas De Quincey, Judas Iscariot and Other Writings, page 274,
 * as after the rectification of his views, he was incapable of compromise with profounder shapes of error.
 * 1)  The determination of a straight line whose length is equal to a portion of a curve.
 * 2)  The truncation of a polyhedron by replacing each vertex with a face that passes though the midpoint of each edge connected to the vertex; an analogous procedure on a polytope of dimension higher than 3.
 * 3)  The adjustment of a globe preparatory to the solution of a proposed problem.
 * 4)  Purification of a substance through repeated or continuous distillation.
 * 5)  Any of a number of Chinese and Filipino communist purges. See.
 * 6)  A procedure that attempts to determine a person's time of birth based on events in their life.
 * 1)  A procedure that attempts to determine a person's time of birth based on events in their life.

Translations

 * Bulgarian:
 * Romanian:
 * Russian:
 * Tagalog: pagwawasto
 * Turkish:, iyileştime

Etymology
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