plenal

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English

Etymology

From Latin plenus (full). Compare plenary.

Adjective

plenal (comparative more plenal, superlative most plenal)

  1. (obsolete) full; complete
    • 1902, Alfred H. Lloyd, “A Study in the Logic of the Early Greek Philosophy”, in The Monist, volume 12, page 407:
      The greatest thing, necessarily including all other things, however plenal within itself, could not but be empty in respect to their fulness.
    • 1913, Arthur Keith, “Problems relating to the Teeth of the Earlier Forms of Prehistoric Man”, in Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine, volume 6, page 113:
      If the orang dentition (see fig. 9) be taken as representing a mean or plenal degree of development, then the gorilla's represents a supra-plenal phase, and the chimpanzee's the infra-plenal phase.
  2. Pertaining to a hypothetical substance that fills all the voids in the universe.
    • 1991, Nicholas Griffin, Russell's Idealist Apprenticeship, page 223:
      One physical advantage which Russell claims for the plenal theory, though again without full conviction, is a solution to the antinomy of absolute motion:
    • 2001, Julian B. Barbour, The Discovery of Dynamics:
      There is thus a relative motion between the earth and the plenal fluid touching it.

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