facultative

adj
/ˈfæ.kəl.tə.tɪv/UK/ˈfæ.kəlˌteɪ.tɪv/US

Etymology

From French facultatif. By surface analysis, faculty + -ative.

  1. borrowed from facultatif

Definitions

  1. Of or relating to faculty, especially to mental faculty.

  2. Not obligate

    Not obligate; optional, discretionary or elective.

    • But does the penny fare end here, said Mr. Nixon, at a merely facultative stop? Surely it ends rather at the station.
    • The policy would be a “facultative” policy, whereby the insurers would first have assessed the risk involved in the particular shipment and decided to accept it.
  3. That grants permission or power to do something.

  4. + 2 more definitions
    1. Able to perform a particular life function, or to live generally, in more than one way.

      • facultative feeder
    2. At which a given function is positive.

      • For then it is seen, as before, that it is the points outside the two sheets which are facultative, and not the points between the surface and the touching plane.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for facultative. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA