[syn: relation back, relation]
6. (usually plural) mutual dealings or connections among persons or groups;
- Example: "international relations"
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:
Relation \Re*la"tion\ (r?-l?"sh?n), n. [F. relation, L. relatio.
See Relate.]
1. The act of relating or telling; also, that which is
related; recital; account; narration; narrative; as, the
relation of historical events.
[1913 Webster]
??????oet's relation doth well figure them. --Bacon.
[1913 Webster]
2. The state of being related or of referring; what is
apprehended as appertaining to a being or quality, by
considering it in its bearing upon something else;
relative quality or condition; the being such and such
with regard or respect to some other thing; connection;
as, the relation of experience to knowledge; the relation
of master to servant.
[1913 Webster]
Any sort of connection which is perceived or
imagined between two or more things, or any
comparison which is made by the mind, is a relation.
--I. Taylor.
[1913 Webster]
3. Reference; respect; regard.
[1913 Webster]
I have been importuned to make some observations on
this art in relation to its agreement with poetry.
--Dryden.
[1913 Webster]
4. Connection by consanguinity or affinity; kinship;
relationship; as, the relation of parents and children.
[1913 Webster]
Relations dear, and all the charities
Of father, son, and brother, first were known.
--Milton.
[1913 Webster]
5. A person connected by cosanguinity or affinity; a
relative; a kinsman or kinswoman.
[1913 Webster]
For me . . . my relation does not care a rush. --Ld.
Lytton.
[1913 Webster]
6. (Law)
(a) The carrying back, and giving effect or operation to,
an act or proceeding frrom some previous date or time,
by a sort of fiction, as if it had happened or begun
at that time. In such case the act is said to take
effect by relation.
(b) The act of a relator at whose instance a suit is
begun. --Wharton. Burrill.
[1913 Webster]
Syn: Recital; rehearsal; narration; account; narrative; tale;
detail; description; kindred; kinship; consanguinity;
affinity; kinsman; kinswoman.
[1913 Webster]
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006):
relation
n 1: an abstraction belonging to or characteristic of two
entities or parts together
2: the act of sexual procreation between a man and a woman; the
man's penis is inserted into the woman's vagina and excited
until orgasm and ejaculation occur [syn: sexual
intercourse, intercourse, sex act, copulation,
coitus, coition, sexual congress, congress, sexual
relation, relation, carnal knowledge]
3: a person related by blood or marriage; "police are searching
for relatives of the deceased"; "he has distant relations
back in New Jersey" [syn: relative, relation]
4: an act of narration; "he was the hero according to his own
relation"; "his endless recounting of the incident eventually
became unbearable" [syn: relation, telling, recounting]
5: (law) the principle that an act done at a later time is
deemed by law to have occurred at an earlier time; "his
attorney argued for the relation back of the amended
complaint to the time the initial complaint was filed" [syn:
relation back, relation]
6: (usually plural) mutual dealings or connections among persons
or groups; "international relations"
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (19 January 2023):
relation
1. A subset of the product of two sets,
R : A x B
If (a, b) is an element of R then we write
a R b
meaning a is related to b by R.
A relation may be: reflexive (a R a), symmetric (a R b =>
b R a), transitive (a R b & b R c => a R c), antisymmetric
(a R b & b R a => a = b) or total (a R b or b R a).
Relations are most commonly between two sets (binary
relations) but could be between more than two.
See equivalence relation, partial ordering, pre-order,
total ordering.
2. A table in a relational database.
(1995-02-28)