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What is the noun for conceptualised?

What's the noun for conceptualised? Here's the word you're looking for.

conception
  1. The act of conceiving.
  2. The state of being conceived; the beginning.
  3. The fertilization of an ovum by a sperm to form a zygote.
  4. The start of pregnancy.
  5. The formation of a conceptus or an implanted embryo.
  6. The power or faculty of apprehending of forming an idea in the mind; the power of recalling a past sensation or perception; the ability to form mental abstractions.
  7. An image, idea, or notion formed in the mind; a concept, plan or design.
  8. Synonyms:
  9. Examples:
    1. “So that's where a conception of the imagination, which has traditionally been in the care of our artists, our writers, and so forth, comes in.”
      “Sensory analysis often provides the tools necessary to guide the product development process from conception through to completion.”
      “Their names did not appear on the birth certificate because conception had taken place after they died.”
concept
  1. abstract and general idea; an abstraction
  2. understanding retained in the mind, from experience, reasoning and/or imagination; a generalization (generic, basic form), or abstraction (mental impression), of a particular set of instances or occurrences (specific, though different, recorded manifestations of the concept).
  3. (programming) In generic programming, a description of supported operations on a type, including their syntax and semantics.
  4. Synonyms:
  5. Examples:
    1. “She added that the concept of pivoting, in the business sense, was misunderstood by many.”
      “To rethink the concept of popular sovereignty beyond the nation-state appears to entail a contradiction in terms.”
      “Adaptation, a concept of increasing interest to cultural geographers, plays an important role in shaping patterns of cultural diffusion.”
conceptualism
  1. The art movement towards conceptual art.
  2. (philosophy) A theory, intermediate between realism and nominalism, that the mind has the power of forming for itself general conceptions of individual or single objects.
  3. Examples:
    1. “What is probably the very first monograph ever devoted to Auriol deals with his conceptualism.”
      “But LaBute is also concerned with the conflict between art and morality and the grandstanding exhibitionism of contemporary conceptualism.”
      “The names by which the three doctrines are respectively designated are, Realism, Nominalism, and conceptualism.”
conceptualization
  1. The process of forming a conceptual form of a phenomenon; the act of conceptualizing
  2. The concept so formed; something conceptualized
  3. Synonyms:
  4. Examples:
    1. “The role of the group and their management and conceptualization of the project has been underreported.”
      “This indeterminacy was key to the supervisor's conceptualization of the effects for the film.”
      “With this equipment, a drastic reduction in technical range corresponds with an increased emphasis on conceptualization.”
conceptualist
  1. An artist involved in the conceptualism movement.
  2. (philosophy) One who maintains the theory of conceptualism.
  3. Synonyms:
  4. Examples:
    1. “By Lyons's definition, Cognitive Grammar would count as unashamedly conceptualist.”
      “It is this conceptualist self-reflexivity which is so often the sign of a postmodernist origin.”
      “Frazer thought that conceptualist explanations of conception resulted in the beginning of totem clans derived from a particular natural creature.”
conceptor
  1. A person who comes up with the idea for something.
  2. A class of words that represent the same concept.
conceptus
  1. The fetus or embryo, including all the surrounding tissues protecting and nourishing it during pregnancy.
  2. Examples:
    1. “And indeed biologists tend to talk about the embryo before that, as a conceptus or a pre-embryo.”
      “But we do not suppose that this nature and plan by themselves account for the later development of the zygote and conceptus.”
      “Thus the difference in susceptibility to RDS in premature singletons and multiples may depend on the size of the conceptus.”
conceivability
  1. The characteristic of being conceivable; the ability to be conceived, believed, or understood.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Many evolutionary biologists are satisfied with a very undemanding form of ability or capacity-namely conceivability.”
      “There was no universe, no sheer conceivability, merely absence of cognitive ability.”
      “Hence the conceivability of an autonomously operating rational soul.”
conceptualisation
  1. the act of conceptualising, or something conceptualised
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Psychotherapy may be in conflict with biomedical psychiatry in its conceptualisation of mental illness.”
      “Without vision, the process of conceptualisation can becomes an onerous task for any individual.”
      “An individualised case conceptualisation helps organise complex information about a patient and is a blueprint for guiding treatment.”
conceptibility
  1. The quality of being conceivable; conceivableness.
conceivableness
conceptuality
  1. the state or quality of being conceptual
  2. Examples:
    1. “Still alive in the Orient even today, it faded in the West from the 13th century with the coming of causality, conceptuality and positivism.”
      “The transcendent God, who is beyond all being, all rationality, and all conceptuality, is divested of divine transcendence.”
      “It is a rarity for a monochrome to be treated with the same eloquence and conceptuality.”
conceiver
  1. One who, or that which, conceives.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “It is interesting to note that the conception of the idea required no labor on the part of the conceiver.”
      “That is a symbol, not intended as such by its conceiver, but all the more significant, of the transition time.”
      “What we have to appreciate is how much the conceiver of these hymns would have contemplated to give such original ideas!”
conceptualizer
  1. One who conceptualizes.
  2. Examples:
    1. “This posits the existence of a conceptualizer, a formulator, and and articulator, each of which contains procedural knowledge.”
      “It is concluded that the first component, the conceptualizer, is probably partly language-specific and partly language-independent.”
      “But Wallace, unsurpassed as a collector, was also becoming a great conceptualizer.”
conceptionalist
  1. (philosophy) A conceptualist.
conceptlessness
  1. Absence of concepts.
conceiving
conceptualisations
  1. plural of conceptualisation
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “As for the modalities of the divergences, they are in the subject of a variety of conceptualisations.”
      “Standard medical conceptualisations and treatments of violence often erase or undermine women's agency and selfhood.”
      “Social Economy, solidarity economy, popular economy, which conceptualisations for which models of development?”
conceptualizations
  1. plural of conceptualization
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “This becomes crucial when considering the genealogy of poststructuralist theorizing that contests modernist conceptualizations of power.”
      “The conceptualizations that philosophy offers are not adequate to the sudden death of a loved one, nor the anguish in families that follows.”
      “Excluded from consideration are such matters as a speaker's intentions, intuitions, and conceptualizations.”
conceptionalists
  1. plural of conceptionalist
conceptualizers
  1. plural of conceptualizer
  2. Examples:
    1. “Some of these characterizations were used repeatedly across cases as problem identifiers and problem conceptualizers.”
conceivabilities
conceptualists
  1. plural of conceptualist
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “But as a previous generation of ambitious conceptualists proved in the seventies, pop sometimes works best when ideas are rationed sparingly.”
      “Lest the conceptualists feel overlooked, I should mention Les Leveque's 2 Spellbound, an eight-minute version of Hitchcock's feature film Spellbound.”
      “The most that conceptualists can justify is the demand that we forgo or re-categorize them.”
conceptualisms
  1. plural of conceptualism
conceptualities
  1. plural of conceptuality
conceivings
conceptions
  1. plural of conception
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The place was poor beyond the conceptions of a privileged 21 st-century Westerner.”
      “The shift to decompositional conceptions of analysis was not without precedents, however.”
      “His plans were bold and fiery, and his conceptions glowed with barbaric lustre.”
concepti
  1. plural of conceptus
conceivers
  1. plural of conceiver
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “This is our philosophy, as finally you are the conceivers of your marriage.”
      “Great reformers, however, must be both conceivers of radical policy and implementers of it.”
      “Maria Voskresenskaya, one of the game's conceivers, told Reuters that the game took only two weeks to create.”
conceptors
  1. plural of conceptor
conceptuses
  1. plural of conceptus
  2. Examples:
    1. “From the e18 conceptuses, brain, liver, and the placenta were dissected for methylation analysis.”
      “Ovoidal conceptuses were recovered from the uteri of four pigs with SCNT-derived embryos.”
concepts
  1. plural of concept
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “His method was to graft older musical concepts to computer-based realization.”
      “These concepts have been expertly explained in a lucid and easy manner and has been supplemented by more than 50 photographs and diagrams.”
      “These spiritual concepts lead onto a whole lot of other spiritual concepts.”
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