frequence

IPA: frˈikwʌns

noun

  • (obsolete) A crowd or throng of people.
  • (obsolete) Frequency; abundance.
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Examples of "frequence" in Sentences

  • On a long elevator ride, sway side to side at the normal frequence of the elevator.
  • The work blitz is over and you can expect posts to appear with much more frequence now.
  • I am not that could in hardware and all such stuff, but I believe we had some kind of frequence problem; -)
  • If we are to assume Stickam.com is at fault, we should also consider AOL.com at fault — which this occurs with far more frequence.
  • And we get this great news from the AP, who we know have given John McCain so many passes in the past, he now has 1 million frequence miles all thanks to the AP.
  • We do not have adequate evidence to suggest that global warming can lead to an increase or decrease in terms of intensity or frequence of el Nino or la Nina situations, he said.
  • In this way it was possible to approach, even if not to give conclusively, the answer to the difficult question of the possibility or frequence of transmission of bovine tuberculosis to humans.
  • I also create tags for each comment and cocomment creates a tag cloud (a paragraph of words with the larger words being more frequent in my comments and the smaller ones with less frequence) which makes it easy for me to go back to all of my comments on a certain topic (All of my DOPA comments, for example.)
  • What had seemed to be isolated incidents of brigandage began to look like more than that Lone wagons, no matter the number of Knights, were raided with increasing frequence and efficiency, and survivors reported that they were struck by growing bands of elves who fought by no rules any Knight or soldier knew, who seemed to reinvent their tactics daily.

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synonyms for frequencedescribing words for frequence
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