cive


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Related to cive: vice, chive
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  • noun

Synonyms for cive

perennial having hollow cylindrical leaves used for seasoning

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
In applications of vegetation segmentation in natural and complex environments, the color has yielded efficient results as shown by methods such as CIVE [21] and excess-green [22], among others.
THOMAS HOBBES, De Cive (1642), en Hobbes, Man and Citizen, ed.
(1996) La colaboracion intersdisciplinar: el Proyecto CIVE. La Revista de AELFE, o, 41-60.
She tells him that "e sarai meco sanza fine cive / di quella Roma onde Cristo e romano" ("Thou of that Rome where Christ a Roman is / Shalt be with me perpetual citizen," canto 32.101-2).
Em De cive, (g) Hobbes opoe fundamentalmente o povo, "especie de unidade que tem uma vontade unica", a multidao, e o Um tornado politico ao agregado selvagem cujo retorno ameacador e interditado pela lei.
Seventeenth-century English political philosopher Thomas Hobbes (1588-1674) posited the concept of civil society in his two works De Cive (1651) and Leviathan (1660) .
The second edition of De Cive and the subsequent publication of Human Nature and De Corpore Politico merely entrenched the earlier responses.
Pakistan, which used to be full of "Cive" (Hurray) clamors, is dealing with the agonies of a flood disaster today.
In his "Elementa philosophica de cive", he considers that the fundament of the state was not deriving from the Christian faith, but from human needs and individual aims oriented reason.
in Lawson 826); or Clive leaving the house in tears after saying: "Leave me my honour, take away my fortune" (Cive qtd.