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What is the noun for phenom?

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

phenomenon
  1. A thing or being, event or process, perceptible through senses; or a fact or occurrence thereof.
  2. (extension) A knowable thing or event (eg by inference, especially in science).
  3. (metonymy) A kind or type of phenomenon (sense 1 or 2).
  4. Appearance; a perceptible aspect of something that is mutable.
  5. A fact or event considered very unusual, curious, or astonishing by those who witness it.
  6. A wonderful or very remarkable person or thing.
  7. (philosophy) An experienced object whose constitution reflects the order and conceptual structure imposed upon it by the human mind (especially by the powers of perception and understanding).
  8. Synonyms:
  9. Examples:
    1. “He claimed the fog reported by the farmers was a natural phenomenon and not caused by nearby factories.”
      “NASA's space probes have discovered a strange phenomenon at the edge of our solar system.”
      “He was a phenomenon during his era when his eponymous chat show was without rival.”
phenom
  1. Someone or something that is phenomenal, especially a young player in sports like baseball, American football, basketball, tennis, and golf.
  2. One who is hip and fashionable.
  3. Synonyms:
  4. Examples:
    1. “The skew to an equal number of boys and girls, and to an older demo, allowing for a trickle-down to younger ones, has also propelled the phenom.”
      “In a 1994 book, Inside the Tour de France, Walsh included a sympathetic portrait of a young phenom from Texas named Lance Armstrong.”
      “Crosby is a 15-year-old phenom from Nova Scotia who is the odds-on favourite to be the first overall pick in the 2005 NHL draft.”
phenomenalism
  1. (philosophy) The doctrine that physical objects exist only as perceptual phenomena or sensory stimuli
  2. Examples:
    1. “Edwards' mental phenomenalism is a natural extension of his occasionalism and views on substance.”
      “Thus phenomenalism sought to reduce all statements to statements about immediately perceived sense-data.”
      “Ayer by now thought phenomenalism was unsuccessful in this attempt, and again reductionism would not work for the future cases.”
phenomenality
  1. The state or property of being phenomenal.
  2. Examples:
    1. “This would suggest that phenomenality was inherently intentional, while intentionality was not inherently phenomenal.”
      “Levinas's text here echoes his 1961 claims about the face as expression that pierces through phenomenality.”
      “Henry opposed this conception of the phenomenality as a radical phenomenology of life.”
phenomenist
  1. One who believes in the theory of phenomenalism.
  2. Examples:
    1. “Secondly, Lenin's distinction between the phenomenist and the dialectic philosopher is crucial.”
phenomenalist
  1. One who subscribes to the philosophy of phenomenalism.
  2. Examples:
    1. “Mach sought to reformulate Newtonian mechanics from a phenomenalist standpoint.”
      “Such an inference only follows if the subjectivist standpoint be accepted to the exclusion of the phenomenalist point of view.”
      “The two chief tendencies which thus conflicted in Kants mind may be named the subjectivist and the phenomenalist respectively.”
phenomenalisms
  1. plural of phenomenalism
phenomenalists
  1. plural of phenomenalist
  2. Examples:
    1. Phenomenalists, or idealists generally, will reply that realism is mistaken or even incoherent.”
phenomenalities
  1. plural of phenomenality
phenomena
  1. plural form of phenomenon.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “These policies have left us badly exposed and at the mercy of natural phenomena like drought.”
      “Bird cherry blooming is one of the most distinctive phenomena in nature cycle.”
      “But can the repeated Big Rips explain the same phenomena that we take as evidence for the big bang?”
phenomenists
  1. plural of phenomenist
phenomenons
  1. (nonstandard) plural of phenomenon
phenoms
  1. plural of phenom
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Azinger, then 37 and in his 16th year on tour, saw in the 21-year-old rookie the quality of mind that separates phenoms from prodigies.”
      “There's something about seeing these two undeniably talented phenoms sharing a bro hug that feels so appropriate.”
      “But the thing about phenoms is they can come in hot and then fizzle into a lower voltage of play.”
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