Crossword-Solution: REFLEXIVE 9 letters, 3 clues 🏆 scrabble score: 22

Dictionary

Word Word Type Definition
Reflexive a. Bending or turned backward; reflective; having respect
to something past.
Reflexive a. Implying censure.
Reflexive a. Having for its direct object a pronoun which refers to
the agent or subject as its antecedent; -- said of certain verbs; as,
the witness perjured himself; I bethought myself. Applied also to
pronouns of this class; reciprocal; reflective.

We have 3 clues for the answer “REFLEXIVE”

Clue Answers
denoting a pronoun that refers back to the subject of a sentence or clause 1 answer
referring back to itself 1 answer
Type of verb which, loosely, has the same subject and object 1 answer
✏️ Suggest another clue Know another question for crossword solution "REFLEXIVE"? Please add your clue to the biggest crossword databank now!
Dermatological complaint
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Hint 1 meaning
An inflammatory disease of the skin, characterized by the presence of redness and itching, an eruption of small vesicles, and the discharge of a watery exudation, which often dries up, leaving the skin covered with crusts; -- called also tetter, milk crust, and salt rheum.
Hint 2 anagram
AMCEZE
Hint 3 another clue
eruption
9 +1

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Sentences with REFLEXIVE (5)

Why, it is just like being the past tense of the compound reflexive adverbial incandescent hypodermic irregular accusative Noun of Multitude; which is father to the expression which the grammarians call Verb.
What Is Man? And Other Stories Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) 1993
See Think.] To call to mind; to recall or bring to recollection, reflection, or consideration; to think; to consider; Ð generally followed by a reflexive pronoun, often with of or that before the subject of thought.
Webster's Unabridged Dictionary Noah Webster 1995
God have pity upon me! I already know what prayer is--a solemn and reflexive supplication, so personal that it is not compatible with formulas learned by heart; an expansion of the soul which dares to reach out toward its source; the opposite of remorse, in which the soul, at war with itself, seeks in vain to defend itself by sophisms and concealments.
Doña Perfecta B. Perez Galdos 2006
Icelandic - bua, prepare; sik, oneself; sk, for sik, was in old Norse or Icelandic a suffix marking the reflexive form of a verb.
A Bundle of Ballads Various 2001
After you'd gone the other day, 'e said to me: 'Looks reflexive-like does the little lady nowadays; as if she'd got something on 'er mind.' And I to him: 'Pooh! Isn't it enough that she's got to put up with the cranks and crotchets of one o' YOUR sect?'--Oh Mary, my dear, there's many a true word said in jest.
Australia Felix Henry Handel Richardson 2003

Quotes with REFLEXIVE (3)

It is very important to note that the transcendence of the object is by no means a primitive component necessarily ingredient in all knowledge. It is missing in all ecstatic knowledge. In ecstatic knowledge the known world is still not objectively given. Only when the (logically and genetically simultaneous) act furnishing ecstatic knowledge and the subject which performs this act become themselves the content of knowledge in the act of reflection does the character originall…
Max Scheler
Only after the concept of knowledge has been based on an ontological relation [*Seinsverhältnis*] can we work out the particular kind of being from which the principle of immanence-to-consciousness (the starting point of Idealism and Critical Realism) mistakenly proceeds as though from a primary insight. This is the being of "being-conscious" [*Bewusst-Seins*]. All being-conscious must first of all be brought under the higher concept of ideal being, or, at all events, that of…
Max Scheler
One of my principal theses is that in every case the nature of a being (contingent as well as essential nature) can, in principle, be immanent to and truly inherent in knowledge and reflexive consciousness as it is outside of consciousness, and therefore not only as it is represented by some image, perception, idea [*Vorstellung*], or thought. This immanence of the nature of a being to consciousness occurs, of course, with totally different degrees of adequation and on comple…
Max Scheler Selected Philosophical Essays