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affinity |
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affinityIn chemistry, the force of attraction (see bond) between atoms that helps to keep them in combination in a molecule. The term is also applied to attraction between molecules, such as those of biochemical significance (for example, between enzymes and substrate molecules). This is the basis for affinity chromatography, by which biologically important compounds are separated. The atoms of a given element may have a greater affinity for the atoms of one element than for another (for example, hydrogen has a great affinity for chlorine, with which it easily and rapidly combines to form hydrogen chloride, but has little or no affinity for argon).
affinityIn law, relationship by marriage not blood (for example, between a husband and his wife's blood relatives, between a wife and her husband's blood relatives, or between step-parent and stepchild), which may legally preclude their marriage. It is distinguished from consanguinity or blood relationship. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| ? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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The house is organized
internally around parents, siblings and junior married couples, with the
central organizing fact being the subordination of the junior generation
to the senior generation, with the affinal ties between houses also
playing an important role. Godparentage,
for instance, bound individuals together in a spiritual/ritual
relationship, but it could also reinforce consanguineal or affinal or
even both ties. Strongly comparative in
orientation, the volume contrasts the relaxed attitude of southern
courts toward cousin marriages (and their strongly negative attitude
toward affinal marriages) with the "Western American System"
described by Bernard Farber. |
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