TRUNCATION


Meaning of TRUNCATION in English

ˌtrəŋˈkāshən noun

( -s )

Etymology: Late Latin truncation-, truncatio, from Latin truncatus (past participle of truncare to cut off) + -ion-, -io -ion

1.

a. : an act or instance of truncating

loss of section … by truncation following uplift — Journal of Geology

truncation of street corners should be aimed at … to increase visibility — John Kemp

b. : omission at the beginning or end of an element (as an unstressed syllable) normally present or expected in a line or other unit of verse — compare catalexis , broken-backed line

c. : a truncated point or area

the truncation on the edge of a crystal

2. : the replacement of an edge or solid angle (as of a crystal) by a plane and especially by one equally inclined to the adjoining faces

3. : the quality or state of being truncated

after revising his work … gave it an effect of truncation and bareness — Van Wyck Brooks

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.