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DODGSONS METHOD

  • Dodgson's method
  • Single-winner ranked-choice voting system

    Dodgson's method is an electoral system based on a proposal by mathematician Charles Dodgson, better known as Lewis Carroll. The method searches for a

    Dodgson's method

    Dodgson's_method

  • Lewis Carroll
  • British author and scholar (1832–1898)

    cryptography. Dodgson proposed alternative systems of parliamentary representation. He proposed the Dodgson's method, using the Condorcet method. In 1884,

    Lewis Carroll

    Lewis Carroll

    Lewis_Carroll

  • Later-no-help criterion
  • the probability that A wins). Thus, Copeland's method fails the Later-no-help criterion. Dodgson's' method elects a Condorcet winner if there is one, and

    Later-no-help criterion

    Later-no-help_criterion

  • Condorcet method
  • Pairwise-comparison electoral system

    Nanson's method and Baldwin's method combine Borda Count with an instant runoff procedure. Dodgson's method extends the Condorcet method by swapping

    Condorcet method

    Condorcet method

    Condorcet_method

  • D'Hondt method
  • Method for allocating seats in parliaments

    The D'Hondt method, also called the Jefferson method or the greatest divisors method, is an apportionment method for allocating seats in parliaments among

    D'Hondt method

    D'Hondt_method

  • Electoral system
  • Method by which voters make a choice between options

    Condorcet method called Nanson's method. Charles Dodgson, better known as Lewis Carroll, proposed the straightforward Condorcet method known as Dodgson's method

    Electoral system

    Electoral_system

  • Quota method
  • Proportional-representation voting system

    highest averages methods (also called divisor methods). By far the most common quota method are the largest remainders or quota-shift methods, which assign

    Quota method

    Quota_method

  • First-past-the-post voting
  • Plurality voting system

    election result is an example of center squeeze. By contrast, Condorcet methods would elect Nashville (the actual capital). Perhaps the most striking effect

    First-past-the-post voting

    First-past-the-post voting

    First-past-the-post_voting

  • Schulze method
  • Single-winner electoral system

    method (/ˈʃʊltsə/), also known as the beatpath method, is a single winner ranked-choice voting rule developed by Markus Schulze. The Schulze method is

    Schulze method

    Schulze_method

  • Sortition
  • Selection of decision-makers by random sample

    In ancient Athenian democracy, sortition was the traditional and primary method for appointing political officials, and its use was regarded as a principal

    Sortition

    Sortition

  • Condorcet winner
  • Property of electoral systems

    Condorcet criterion. Other methods satisfying the criterion include: Black Kemeny-Young Dodgson's method Minimax Baldwin's method Ranked pairs Schulze Total

    Condorcet winner

    Condorcet_winner

  • Sequential elimination method
  • Class of voting systems

    method until a single candidate remains. The method used to determine the loser is called the base method. Common are the two-round system, instant-runoff

    Sequential elimination method

    Sequential_elimination_method

  • Single transferable vote
  • Multi-winner electoral system

    lists of individual candidates in elections using the largest remainders method to elect the winning candidates, rather than list-based proportional systems

    Single transferable vote

    Single transferable vote

    Single_transferable_vote

  • Homogeneity criterion
  • a percentage of votes, may not satisfy the homogeneity criterion. Dodgson's method does not satisfy homogeneity. The following four voter preference profiles

    Homogeneity criterion

    Homogeneity_criterion

  • Dodgson condensation
  • Method of computing determinants

    In mathematics, Dodgson condensation or method of contractants is a method of computing the determinants of square matrices. It is named for its inventor

    Dodgson condensation

    Dodgson_condensation

  • Borda count
  • Point-based ranked voting system

    year, Dodgson proposed replacing his Borda count method with one similar to Copeland's method, then in 1876 proposed a hybrid of the two in "A method of

    Borda count

    Borda_count

  • Instant-runoff voting
  • Single-winner ranked-choice electoral system

    under the plurality-with-elimination family of voting methods, and is thus closely related to methods like the two-round system and party primary. Instant-runoff

    Instant-runoff voting

    Instant-runoff_voting

  • Ranked voting
  • Voting systems that use ranked ballots

    ranks as weights. These systems are called positional voting. In the Borda method, the least-favored candidates on each ballot receive fewer points; the most-favored

    Ranked voting

    Ranked voting

    Ranked_voting

  • List of electoral systems
  • Droop quota Largest remainder method (supplemental method to using quotas) Multi-round voting (common supplemental method to using absolute majority Pairwise

    List of electoral systems

    List_of_electoral_systems

  • STAR voting
  • Single-winner electoral system

    ratings. Although tie votes in STAR Voting are rare, as with any voting method, they can occur, especially in elections without many voters. In most cases

    STAR voting

    STAR voting

    STAR_voting

  • Apportionment (politics)
  • Way to distribute seats in a legislative body

    D'Hondt method – higher seats-to-votes ratio for larger parties Droop quota Imperiali quota Huntington–Hill method These apportionment methods can be categorized

    Apportionment (politics)

    Apportionment (politics)

    Apportionment_(politics)

  • Center squeeze
  • Spoiler effect in RCV and two-round systems

    candidate, which means they will be elected by any method compatible with majority-rule. However, in methods that strongly prioritize first preferences, these

    Center squeeze

    Center squeeze

    Center_squeeze

  • Copeland's method
  • Single-winner ranked vote system

    The Copeland or Llull method is a ranked-choice voting system based on counting each candidate's pairwise wins and losses. In the system, voters rank candidates

    Copeland's method

    Copeland's_method

  • Sainte-Laguë method
  • Proportional-representation electoral system

    The Sainte-Laguë method (French pronunciation: [sɛ̃t.la.ɡy]), also called the Webster method or the Schepers method (German pronunciation: [ˈʃeːpɐs]),

    Sainte-Laguë method

    Sainte-Laguë_method

  • Cumulative voting
  • Multiple-winner electoral system

    100%). If instead the sum of squares must add up to a fixed value, the method becomes quadratic voting. Cumulative voting is semi-proportional, allowing

    Cumulative voting

    Cumulative_voting

  • Unseating
  • Political term about incumbents losing elections

    voting Condorcet methods Copeland's method Dodgson's method Kemeny method Minimax Condorcet method Nanson's method Ranked pairs Schulze method Exhaustive ballot

    Unseating

    Unseating

  • Black's method
  • Single-winner electoral system

    Black's method is an election method proposed by Duncan Black in 1958 as a compromise between the Condorcet method and the Borda count. This method selects

    Black's method

    Black's_method

  • Highest averages method
  • Rule for proportional allocation

    The highest averages, divisor, or divide-and-round methods are a family of apportionment rules, i.e. algorithms for fair division of seats in a legislature

    Highest averages method

    Highest_averages_method

  • Party-list proportional representation
  • Family of voting systems

    categories: The highest averages method (or divisor method), including the D'Hondt method (also known as the Jefferson method) is used in Armenia, Austria

    Party-list proportional representation

    Party-list proportional representation

    Party-list_proportional_representation

  • Closed list
  • Variant of party-list voting system

    voting Condorcet methods Copeland's method Dodgson's method Kemeny method Minimax Condorcet method Nanson's method Ranked pairs Schulze method Exhaustive ballot

    Closed list

    Closed_list

  • Seats-to-votes ratio
  • Measure of equal representation

    apportionment methods such as Sainte-Laguë method and D'Hondt method differ in the seats-to-votes ratio for individual parties. The Sainte-Laguë method optimizes

    Seats-to-votes ratio

    Seats-to-votes_ratio

  • Mutual majority criterion
  • Property of electoral systems

    contingent vote, Young's method, first past the post, and Black fail, even though they pass the majority-favorite criterion. The Schulze method, ranked pairs, instant-runoff

    Mutual majority criterion

    Mutual_majority_criterion

  • Ballot
  • Document used to cast votes in an election

    voting Condorcet methods Copeland's method Dodgson's method Kemeny method Minimax Condorcet method Nanson's method Ranked pairs Schulze method Exhaustive ballot

    Ballot

    Ballot

    Ballot

  • Overhang seat
  • Phenomenon in electoral systems

    total number of seats and recalculating the quota (the largest remainder method was also recommended) to proportionally redistribute the list seats to the

    Overhang seat

    Overhang_seat

  • Method of analytic tableaux
  • Tool for proving a logical formula

    Lutwidge Dodgson (also known by his literary pseudonym, Lewis Carroll) introduced the Method of Trees, the earliest modern use of a truth tree. The method of

    Method of analytic tableaux

    Method of analytic tableaux

    Method_of_analytic_tableaux

  • Coombs' method
  • Single-winner ranked voting rule

    Coombs' method is a ranked voting system. Like instant-runoff (IRV-RCV), Coombs' method is a sequential-loser method, where the last-place finisher according

    Coombs' method

    Coombs'_method

  • Dodgson
  • Name list

    George Dodgson Callow (1829–1875), English painter John Dodgson Barrow, American landscape painter Dodgson condensation, mathematical method named after

    Dodgson

    Dodgson

  • Pareto efficiency
  • Weakly optimal allocation of resources

    tutorial on multiobjective optimization: fundamentals and evolutionary methods". Natural Computing. 17: 585–609. doi:10.1007/s11047-018-9685-y. PMC 6105305

    Pareto efficiency

    Pareto_efficiency

  • Reading
  • Taking in the meaning of letters or symbols

    the method for everyone, and by 1837 the method was adopted by the Boston Primary School Committee. By 1844 the defects of the whole-word method became

    Reading

    Reading

    Reading

  • Non-negative responsiveness
  • Electoral pathology or paradox

    ranked methods (including Borda and all common round-robin rules) satisfy non-negative responsiveness, as do all common rated voting methods (including

    Non-negative responsiveness

    Non-negative_responsiveness

  • First-preference vote
  • Individual voter's first choice

    Methods like Condorcet voting, rated voting, and the Borda count do not exhibit such effects. Methods like anti-plurality voting and Coombs' method have

    First-preference vote

    First-preference vote

    First-preference_vote

  • Bullet voting
  • Vote supporting only a single candidate

    support for a single favorite. Every voting method that does not satisfy either later-no-harm (most methods) or monotonicity (such as instant-runoff voting)

    Bullet voting

    Bullet voting

    Bullet_voting

  • Two-round system
  • Voting system

    from a single set of ordinal preferences. The two-round system is such a method, because the voters are not forced to vote according to a single ordinal

    Two-round system

    Two-round system

    Two-round_system

  • Participation criterion
  • Principle that voting for a candidate should help them

    a possibility violates the principle of one man, one vote. Positional methods and score voting satisfy the participation criterion. All deterministic

    Participation criterion

    Participation_criterion

  • Electoral list
  • Grouping of candidates for election

    voting Condorcet methods Copeland's method Dodgson's method Kemeny method Minimax Condorcet method Nanson's method Ranked pairs Schulze method Exhaustive ballot

    Electoral list

    Electoral_list

  • Electoral system of Germany
  • Federal Bundestag election regulation

    Hare-Niemeyer method. Due to a change in the law passed in January 2008, the distribution of seats is now made according to the Sainte-Laguë/Schepers method. The

    Electoral system of Germany

    Electoral_system_of_Germany

  • Mixed-member proportional representation
  • Type of mixed electoral system

    party-list PR) and nationally-based compensatory top-up seats using the same method as MMP, however because the local MPs are also elected using PR, these systems

    Mixed-member proportional representation

    Mixed-member proportional representation

    Mixed-member_proportional_representation

  • Contingent vote
  • Single-winner ranked-voting electoral system

    transferable voting (STV), instant-runoff voting (IRV), Coombs' method, and Baldwin's method – allow for many rounds of counting, often eliminating only one

    Contingent vote

    Contingent vote

    Contingent_vote

  • Round-robin voting
  • Voting systems using paired comparisons

    varies by method. Round-robin methods are one of the four major categories of single-winner electoral methods, along with multi-stage methods (like RCV-IRV)

    Round-robin voting

    Round-robin_voting

  • Droop quota
  • Votes required to win a seat in proportional systems

    Hagenbach-Bischof in the context of STV and not for the largest remainder method. The Droop quota is used in almost all STV elections, including those in

    Droop quota

    Droop_quota

  • Staggered elections
  • Elections where only a part of the body is elected at a time

    voting Condorcet methods Copeland's method Dodgson's method Kemeny method Minimax Condorcet method Nanson's method Ranked pairs Schulze method Exhaustive ballot

    Staggered elections

    Staggered_elections

  • Method of equal shares
  • Method of counting ballots following elections

    The method of equal shares (MES) is a participatory budgeting algorithm specifically designed to guarantee extended justified representation (a form of

    Method of equal shares

    Method_of_equal_shares

  • Minimax Condorcet method
  • Single-winner ranked-choice voting system

    In voting systems, the minimax Condorcet method is a single-winner ranked-choice voting method that always elects the majority (Condorcet) winner. Minimax

    Minimax Condorcet method

    Minimax_Condorcet_method

  • Plurality voting
  • Type of electoral system

    majority-preferred winner, and as a result would be elected by any Condorcet method. Candidates are running in a 3-member district of 10 000 voters. Under non-transferable

    Plurality voting

    Plurality_voting

  • Tideman alternative method
  • Single-winner electoral system family

    The Tideman Alternative method, also called[by whom?] Alternative-Smith voting, is a voting rule developed by Nicolaus Tideman which selects a single winner

    Tideman alternative method

    Tideman_alternative_method

  • Nanson's method
  • Single-winner electoral system

    instant-runoff procedure to create hybrid election methods that are called Nanson's method and Baldwin's method. Both methods are designed to satisfy the Condorcet

    Nanson's method

    Nanson's_method

  • Ranked pairs
  • Single-winner electoral system

    Tideman method, is a ranked voting method that determines a single winner from ballots that rank candidates in order of preference. The method is like

    Ranked pairs

    Ranked_pairs

  • Majority loser criterion
  • Electoral voting system criterion

    criterion does not imply the majority loser criterion, since the minimax method satisfies the Condorcet but not the majority loser criterion. Also, the

    Majority loser criterion

    Majority_loser_criterion

  • Kemeny method
  • Single-winner electoral system

    The Kemeny method is an electoral system that uses ranked ballots and pairwise comparison counts to identify the most popular choices in an election. It

    Kemeny method

    Kemeny_method

  • Electoral quota
  • Number of votes a candidate needs to win

    most commonly used quota for apportionments using the largest remainder method of party-list representation. It was proposed by Thomas Hare in his first

    Electoral quota

    Electoral_quota

  • Majority winner criterion
  • Property of electoral systems

    of voters, that candidate must win. Some methods that comply with this criterion include any Condorcet method, instant-runoff voting, Bucklin voting, plurality

    Majority winner criterion

    Majority_winner_criterion

  • Limited voting
  • Multiple-winner electoral system

    Parliamentary Election Results 1832–1885 Tyson, Robert. ""Various voting methods"". Arena (Jan. 1908): 60. Pedro Tavares de Almeida; Margarida Lopes & João

    Limited voting

    Limited_voting

  • Social welfare function
  • Function that ranks states of society according to their desirability

    order is not the same as the elimination order for sequential elimination methods: despite being eliminated first, Center is the runner-up in this election

    Social welfare function

    Social_welfare_function

  • Spoilt vote
  • Invalid ballot that is not counted

    voting Condorcet methods Copeland's method Dodgson's method Kemeny method Minimax Condorcet method Nanson's method Ranked pairs Schulze method Exhaustive ballot

    Spoilt vote

    Spoilt vote

    Spoilt_vote

  • Computational social choice
  • particular, winner determination for the Kemeny-Young method, Dodgson's method, and Young's method are all NP-hard problems. This has led to the development

    Computational social choice

    Computational_social_choice

  • Liquid democracy
  • Combination of direct and representative democracy

    platforms, however policy examples are listed below. In 1884, Charles Dodgson (more commonly referred to by his pseudonym Lewis Carroll), the author

    Liquid democracy

    Liquid democracy

    Liquid_democracy

  • Graduated majority judgment
  • Single-winner electoral system

    tie-breaking procedure. Graduated majority judgment uses a simple line-drawing method to break ties. This rule is easier to explain than others such as majority

    Graduated majority judgment

    Graduated_majority_judgment

  • Proportional approval voting
  • Multiple-winner electoral system

    for multiwinner elections. It is a multiwinner approval method that extends the D'Hondt method of apportionment commonly used to calculate apportionments

    Proportional approval voting

    Proportional_approval_voting

  • Bucklin voting
  • Class of electoral systems

    all three seats in the first round, so this method does not give proportional representation. The method was proposed by Condorcet in 1793, and was reported

    Bucklin voting

    Bucklin_voting

  • Parallel voting
  • Mixed electoral system

    portion of a legislature is elected using one method, while another portion is elected using a different method, with all voters participating in both. Thus

    Parallel voting

    Parallel voting

    Parallel_voting

  • Single non-transferable vote
  • Multi-winner, semi-proportional electoral system

    more-intricate single transferable vote (STV) system, and has resulted in the method becoming commonly used for ordering open party lists. In any election, each

    Single non-transferable vote

    Single_non-transferable_vote

  • List of electoral systems by country
  • voting Condorcet methods Copeland's method Dodgson's method Kemeny method Minimax Condorcet method Nanson's method Ranked pairs Schulze method Exhaustive ballot

    List of electoral systems by country

    List_of_electoral_systems_by_country

  • Approval voting
  • Single-winner electoral system

    named on a ballot, and the candidate with the most votes is victorious. The method is designed to eliminate vote-splitting while keeping election administration

    Approval voting

    Approval voting

    Approval_voting

  • Majority rule
  • Decision rule that selects alternatives that have a majority

    voting Condorcet methods Copeland's method Dodgson's method Kemeny method Minimax Condorcet method Nanson's method Ranked pairs Schulze method Exhaustive ballot

    Majority rule

    Majority_rule

  • Plurality block voting
  • Non-proportional electoral system

    non-transferable vote, and block plurality voting, is a type of block voting method for multi-winner elections. Each voter may cast as many votes as the number

    Plurality block voting

    Plurality_block_voting

  • Unified primary
  • Single-winner electoral system

    primary elections. Unlike single-round Approval voting, the Approval+Runoff method fails independence of clones, because any time the second-most approved

    Unified primary

    Unified_primary

  • Hare–Clark electoral system
  • Proportional-representation voting system

    Territory. With its use in 1909, it was one of the first uses of the Gregory method for transfers of winner's surplus votes. The name is derived from the names

    Hare–Clark electoral system

    Hare–Clark electoral system

    Hare–Clark_electoral_system

  • Resoluteness criterion
  • Electoral system property

    However, non-resolute methods can be used as a first stage to eliminate candidates before ties are broken with some other method. Methods that have been used

    Resoluteness criterion

    Resoluteness_criterion

  • Sincere favorite criterion
  • Criterion that prevents lesser-evil voting

    incentive to rank one's favorite last, and the method otherwise does not care where the favorite is ranked, the method passes. Anti-plurality voting thus shows

    Sincere favorite criterion

    Sincere_favorite_criterion

  • Satisfaction approval voting
  • Multiple-winner electoral system

    voting Condorcet methods Copeland's method Dodgson's method Kemeny method Minimax Condorcet method Nanson's method Ranked pairs Schulze method Exhaustive ballot

    Satisfaction approval voting

    Satisfaction_approval_voting

  • Score voting
  • Single-winner rated voting system

    for the city's local elections, becoming the first US city to adopt the method. Score voting is used by the Green Party of Utah to elect officers, on a

    Score voting

    Score_voting

  • Highest median voting rules
  • Type of voting rules for an election

    various highest median rules differ in their treatment of ties, i.e., the method of ranking the candidates with the same median rating. Proponents of highest

    Highest median voting rules

    Highest_median_voting_rules

  • Exhaustive ballot
  • Voting method

    Officers of the Scottish Parliament are elected by the exhaustive ballot method. The host city of the Olympic Games is chosen by an exhaustive ballot of

    Exhaustive ballot

    Exhaustive_ballot

  • Schulze STV
  • Proportional-representation ranked voting system

    invented by Markus Schulze, who developed the Schulze method for resolving ties using a Condorcet method. Schulze STV is similar to CPO-STV in that it compares

    Schulze STV

    Schulze_STV

  • Hare quota
  • Electoral system quota formula

    party-list proportional representation when using the largest remainder method. In such cases, the Hare quota gives unbiased apportionments that do not

    Hare quota

    Hare_quota

  • List of political scientists
  • Lutwidge Dodgson (also known as Lewis Carroll) – author of Alice in Wonderland and professor of mathematics at the University of Oxford; devised Dodgson's method

    List of political scientists

    List_of_political_scientists

  • Electoral system of New Zealand
  • System by which New Zealand parliament is elected

    allocated by the Sainte-Laguë method, which is unbiased and does not favour larger parties like the alternative D'Hondt method. If a party has more electoral

    Electoral system of New Zealand

    Electoral system of New Zealand

    Electoral_system_of_New_Zealand

  • Weighted voting
  • Electoral or law making voting system

    voting Condorcet methods Copeland's method Dodgson's method Kemeny method Minimax Condorcet method Nanson's method Ranked pairs Schulze method Exhaustive ballot

    Weighted voting

    Weighted_voting

  • Electoral threshold
  • Vote share required for representation

    Ranked voting systems are widely used in Australia and Ireland. Other methods of introducing ordinality into an electoral system can have similar effects

    Electoral threshold

    Electoral_threshold

  • Scorporo
  • Mixed electoral system formerly used in Italy

    devolved into a de facto parallel voting system. Although the scorporo method is only known to have been used in Italy, a similar version is in used for

    Scorporo

    Scorporo

  • Electoral system of Australia
  • voting was introduced in Western Australia in 1877, followed by an improved method in South Australia in 1890. On the other hand, concerns about postal voting

    Electoral system of Australia

    Electoral_system_of_Australia

  • Neil Dodgson
  • Computer scientist

    Sabin, Dodgson has worked on subdivision surfaces since 2000. Dodgson's team produced the NURBS-compatible subdivision method in 2009. Dodgson has supervised

    Neil Dodgson

    Neil_Dodgson

  • Alternative vote plus
  • Mixed electoral system with compensation

    voting Condorcet methods Copeland's method Dodgson's method Kemeny method Minimax Condorcet method Nanson's method Ranked pairs Schulze method Exhaustive ballot

    Alternative vote plus

    Alternative_vote_plus

  • Mixed single vote
  • Voting method in mixed-member systems

    systems were developed at about the same time: The vote linkage compensation method, where not all, but only "wasted" votes get transferred as list votes to

    Mixed single vote

    Mixed single vote

    Mixed_single_vote

  • Combined approval voting
  • Single-winner electoral system

    Minet, Roy A. (2019-11-23). "Election Simulation Sheds New Light On Voting Methods" (PDF). p. 9. the Candidate having the highest positive (or least negative)

    Combined approval voting

    Combined approval voting

    Combined_approval_voting

  • List of Christians in science and technology
  • List of scientists who are Christians

    Charles Lutwidge Dodgson], English writer, mathematician, and Anglican deacon. Robbins' and Rumsey's investigation of Dodgson's method, a method of evaluating

    List of Christians in science and technology

    List_of_Christians_in_science_and_technology

  • Consistency criterion
  • Property of electoral systems

    ranking-consistent Condorcet method, and no Condorcet method can be winner-consistent. This example shows that Copeland's method violates the consistency

    Consistency criterion

    Consistency_criterion

  • Reversal symmetry
  • Electoral system criterion

    should never elect the worst candidate, according to the method itself (as doing so suggests the method is, in some sense, self-contradictory). The worst candidate

    Reversal symmetry

    Reversal_symmetry

  • Later-no-harm criterion
  • Property of electoral systems

    Later-No-Harm can be considered not applicable to Anti-Plurality if the method is assumed to not accept truncated preference listings from the voter. On

    Later-no-harm criterion

    Later-no-harm_criterion

  • Block preferential voting
  • Unlike single transferable voting (STV), preferential block voting is not a method for obtaining proportional representation, and instead produces similar

    Block preferential voting

    Block_preferential_voting

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Online names & meanings

  • Nami
  • Girl/Female

    Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Japanese, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sanskrit, Tamil

    Nami

    Wave; Lord Vishnu

  • Saudamini | ஸௌதாமிநீ
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Saudamini | ஸௌதாமிநீ

    Lightning

  • Nakshith | நாக்ஷித
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Nakshith | நாக்ஷித

  • YILDIZ
  • Female

    Turkish

    YILDIZ

    Turkish name YILDIZ means "star."

  • Elga
  • Girl/Female

    Christian, French, German, Indian, Russian

    Elga

    Elfin Spear

  • Chinnakannu
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian, Tamil

    Chinnakannu

    Small

  • JAPHETH
  • Male

    English

    JAPHETH

    Anglicized form of Hebrew Yepheth, JAPHETH means "opened" or "abundant, spacious." In the bible, this is the name of the third son of Noah.

  • Crankshaw
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Crankshaw

    English : variant of Cranshaw.

  • Lancelin
  • Boy/Male

    French

    Lancelin

    Servant.

  • Sarish
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Sarish

    Equal

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DODGSONS METHOD

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DODGSONS METHOD

  • Methodist
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to the sect of Methodists; as, Methodist hymns; a Methodist elder.

  • Methodizing
  • p. pr. & vb. n.

    of Methodize

  • Methodism
  • n.

    The system of doctrines, polity, and worship, of the sect called Methodists.

  • Methodological
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to methodology.

  • Methodized
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Methodize

  • Methodization
  • n.

    The act or process of methodizing, or the state of being methodized.

  • Methodistic
  • a.

    Alt. of Methodistical

  • Methodistical
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to methodists, or to the Methodists.

  • Methodist
  • n.

    One who observes method.

  • Methodical
  • a.

    Arranged with regard to method; disposed in a suitable manner, or in a manner to illustrate a subject, or to facilitate practical observation; as, the methodical arrangement of arguments; a methodical treatise.

  • Methodic
  • a.

    Alt. of Methodical

  • Methodios
  • n.

    The art and principles of method.

  • Methodical
  • a.

    Proceeding with regard to method; systematic.

  • Methodology
  • n.

    The science of method or arrangement; a treatise on method.

  • Method
  • n.

    An orderly procedure or process; regular manner of doing anything; hence, manner; way; mode; as, a method of teaching languages; a method of improving the mind.

  • Methodical
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to the ancient school of physicians called methodists.

  • Methodize
  • v. t.

    To reduce to method; to dispose in due order; to arrange in a convenient manner; as, to methodize one's work or thoughts.

  • Methodist
  • n.

    One of a sect of Christians, the outgrowth of a small association called the "Holy Club," formed at Oxford University, A.D. 1729, of which the most conspicuous members were John Wesley and his brother Charles; -- originally so called from the methodical strictness of members of the club in all religious duties.

  • Methodizer
  • n.

    One who methodizes.

  • Method
  • n.

    Classification; a mode or system of classifying natural objects according to certain common characteristics; as, the method of Theophrastus; the method of Ray; the Linnaean method.