Definitions for conditioned
conditioned
con·di·tioned
Spelling: [kuh n-dish-uh nd]
IPA: /kənˈdɪʃ ənd/
Conditioned is a 11 letter English word.
It's valid Scrabble word worth 15 points.
It's valid Words with friends word worth 18 points.
You can make 346 anagrams from letters in conditioned (cddeiinnoot).
Definitions for conditioned
noun
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a particular mode of being of a person or thing; existing state; situation with respect to circumstances.
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state of health:
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fit or requisite state:
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social position:
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a restricting, limiting, or modifying circumstance:
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a circumstance indispensable to some result; prerequisite; that on which something else is contingent:
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Usually, conditions. existing circumstances:
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something demanded as an essential part of an agreement; provision; stipulation:
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Law.
a stipulation in an agreement or instrument transferring property that provides for a change consequent on the occurrence or nonoccurrence of a stated event.
the event upon which this stipulation depends.
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Informal. an abnormal or diseased state of part of the body:
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U.S. Education.
a requirement imposed on a college student who fails to reach the prescribed standard in a course at the end of the regular period of instruction, permitting credit to be established by later performance.
the course or subject to which the requirement is attached.
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Grammar. protasis.
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Logic. the antecedent of a conditional proposition.
Idioms
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on / upon condition that, with the promise or provision that; provided that; if:
adjective
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existing under or subject to conditions.
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characterized by a predictable or consistent pattern of behavior or thought as a result of having been subjected to certain circumstances or conditions.
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Psychology. proceeding from or dependent on a conditioning of the individual; learned; acquired:
Compare unconditioned (def 2).
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made suitable for a given purpose.
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air-conditioned.
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accustomed; inured.
verb (used with object)
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to put in a fit or proper state.
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to accustom or inure:
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to air-condition.
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to form or be a condition of; determine, limit, or restrict as a condition.
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to subject to particular conditions or circumstances:
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U.S. Education. to impose a condition on (a student).
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to test (a commodity) to ascertain its condition.
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to make (something) a condition; stipulate.
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Psychology. to establish a conditioned response in (a subject).
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Textiles.
to test (fibers or fabrics) for the presence of moisture or other foreign matter.
to replace moisture lost from (fibers or fabrics) in manipulation or manufacture.
verb (used without object)
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to make conditions.
Origin of conditioned
late Middle English word dating back to 1400-50; See origin at condition, -ed2
Examples for conditioned
A subject calls my office, requesting to be conditioned for self-hypnosis.
By this point, however, our culture should be conditioned to this kind of behavior.
Women are conditioned to compare themselves with one another.
New York residents—and moviegoers in general—are conditioned to seeing the Big Apple blown to smithereens.
The world has been conditioned to expect such brazen sabotage.
It had been conditioned to scare easily, where blueskins might be involved.
They were conditioned by the supply of free land, or land that was practically free.
Our existing bulbs tend to work, and we are not yet conditioned to think of them as capital investments.
They were conditioned to make it impossible for them to leave their job untended.
If you have conditioned yourself this far, then you can go to the next step.