• | Manner of doing or being; method; form; fashion; custom; way; style; as, the mode of speaking; the mode of dressing. |
• | Prevailing popular custom; fashion, especially in the phrase the mode. |
• | Variety; gradation; degree. |
• | Any combination of qualities or relations, considered apart from the substance to which they belong, and treated as entities; more generally, condition, or state of being; manner or form of arrangement or manifestation; form, as opposed to matter. |
• | The form in which the proposition connects the predicate and subject, whether by simple, contingent, or necessary assertion; the form of the syllogism, as determined by the quantity and quality of the constituent proposition; mood. |
• | Same as Mood. |
• | The scale as affected by the various positions in it of the minor intervals; as, the Dorian mode, the Ionic mode, etc., of ancient Greek music. |
• | A kind of silk. See Alamode, n. |
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