vergence

Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word vergence. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word vergence, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say vergence in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word vergence you have here. The definition of the word vergence will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition ofvergence, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.

English

Etymology

From verge (tend, incline, from Latin vergere) +‎ -ence, synonym of earlier (1660s) vergency (the equivalent of French vergence). Coined as a technical term in ophthalmology, as a hyperonym of convergence and divergence, in 1902. The sense of the numeric quantity in geometric optics was introduced, from use of the term in physiological optics, in the 1920s.

Pronunciation

Noun

vergence (countable and uncountable, plural vergences)

  1. (physiology) The simultaneous turning of both eyes when focusing.
  2. (optics) A measure of convergence or divergence of rays.
    • 1921, The Optician and Scientific Instrument Maker, volume 62, page 1:
      • "a special vertex trial case computed for an object vergence of 4.00."
    • 1947 Benjamin King Johnson, Optics and Optical Instruments: An Introduction with Special Reference to Practical Applications, Courier Corporation (1960 ), p. 152.
      • "Ample movement between the source and condenser should be available in order to allow for a variation in the vergence of the light leaving the condenser"
  3. (geology) The direction of the overturned component of an asymmetric fold.

French

Etymology

1738, glosses New Latin vergentia in the Latin translations of Hippocrates (16th century).

Pronunciation

Noun

vergence f (plural vergences)

  1. (dated, medicine) the quality of being inclined or tending towards something
    • 1738 Philippe Hecquet, La medecine naturelle chez Guillaume Cavelier, p. 646.
      • "il recommande de bien s'assurer de la vergence des humeurs, cest-a-dire, d'où elles partent & vers où elles tendent."
    • 1740 Philippe Hecquet, La medecine, la chirurgie, et la pharmacie des pauvres, t. 2, chez la Veuve Alix, p. 354.
      • "C'est que, suivant le langage d'Hippocrate, l'on ne sçauroit avoir trop d'égard à la vergence des humeurs en fait de purgation, quò vergunt humores eò ducendi."
  2. (physiology) vergence, the simultaneous turning of both eyes when focusing.
  3. (optics) vergence, a measure of convergence or divergence of rays.
    • 1924, M. Dufour, “Le rôle de la vergence en dioptrique”, in Annales d'oculistique, Paris:

Further reading