Meaning Affinity
What does Affinity mean? Here you find 35 meanings of the word Affinity. You can also add a definition of Affinity yourself

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Affinity


In immunology, the strength of binding interaction between antigen and antibody molecules.
Source: medicinenet.com (offline)

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Affinity


In chemistry and biology, the strength of the attaction between two substances, such as two chemicals, or an antigen and an antibody.
Source: cancer.gov

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Affinity


Related by marriage; family relation from one's spouse's family.
Source: nycourts.gov

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Affinity


The equilibrium constant of the reversible reaction of a drug with a receptor to form a drug-receptor complex; the reciprocal of the dissociation constant of a drug-receptor complex. Under the most ge [..]
Source: bumc.bu.edu

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Affinity


Affinity [S]relationship by alliance ( 2 Chronicles 18:1 ) or by marriage ( 1 Kings 3:1 ). Marriages are prohibited within certain degrees of affinity, enumerated Leviticus 18:6-17 . Consanguinity is [..]
Source: biblestudytools.com

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Affinity


natural liking or attraction to something.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Affinity


A conversion figure between the base audience rating and the target audience rating. E.g. An index of 126 for target audience Adults 15-34 against a base audience of Adults 15+ means 15-34s obtained a 26% higher rating than the base average across all Adults 15+.
Source: agbnielsen.com (offline)

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Affinity


(immunology) the attraction between an antigen and an antibody (anthropology) kinship by marriage or adoption; not a blood relationship (biology) state of relationship between organisms or groups of o [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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Affinity


[Marriage]
Source: biblegateway.com

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Affinity


relationship by alliance (2 Chr. 18:1) or by marriage (1 Kings 3:1). Marriages are prohibited within certain degrees of affinity, enumerated Lev. 18:6-17. Consanguinity is relationship by blood.
Source: biblegateway.com

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Affinity


1. a likeness in regards to construction, shape, or value. 2. unions of marriage or legal adoptive processes rather than by genetic markers. 3. with regard to pharmacologic medicine, the propensity of [..]
Source: psychologydictionary.org

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Affinity


attraction (pop)
Source: users.ugent.be

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Affinity


pl: -ties : relationship by marriage compare consanguinity
Source: dictionary.findlaw.com

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Affinity


The keenness with which an ion exchanger takes up and holds on to a counter-ion. Affinities are very much affected by the concentration of the electrolyte surrounding the ion exchanger.
Source: waterindustryforum.com (offline)

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Affinity


The affinity of a ligand is its ability to bind to its biological target.
Source: drugdesign.com

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Affinity


Attraction to, "liking" for; e.g. haemoglobin has an affinity for oxygen, with which it forms oxyhaemoglobin.
Source: felpress.co.uk (offline)

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Affinity


The strength of binding between a ligand and a receptor: high affinity is strong binding, low affinity is a weak binding. Lecture - Signal 1
Source: cellbiology.med.unsw.edu.au (offline)

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Affinity


See binding affinity.
Source: 7e.biopsychology.com (offline)

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Affinity


Affinity is a measure of the intrinsic binding strength of the ligand binding reaction. The intrinsic attractiveness of the binder for the ligand is typically expressed as the equilibrium constant (Ka) of the reaction. The equilibrium constant Ka = [Ligand-Binder]/[Ligand][Binder], where [ ] represents the molar concentration of the material at equ [..]
Source: brendan.com (offline)

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Affinity


The keenness with which an ion exchanger takes up and holds on to a counter-ion. Affinities are very much affected by the concentration of the electrolyte surrounding the ion exchanger.
Source: lenntech.com

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Affinity


Affinity means
Source: definitions.uslegal.com

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Affinity


(n) a natural attraction or feeling of kinship(n) a close connection marked by community of interests or similarity in nature or character(n) inherent resemblance between persons or things(n) (anthrop [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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Affinity


Affinity is a scoring metric that indicates the level of closeness between two apps or domains (how related they are to each other). It can be found in the form of columns throughout SimilarWeb PRO. This score is based on the following method: We use an algorithm that measures approximation between a given app/domain (A) and another app/domain (B) [..]
Source: similarweb.com (offline)

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Affinity


It tells how under- or over-represented our target group is among the people reached by the campaign: Reach% (target group) / Reach% (total population)
Source: mediafieldoutdoor.hu

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Affinity


A measure of the binding strength between antibody and a simple hapten or Antigen determinant. It depends on the closeness of stereochemical fit between antibody Combining Sites and Antigen determinan [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Affinity


Relationship by marriage. May include the relationship between corporate groups linked by marriage between their members.
Source: archaeologyinfo.com

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Affinity


In chemistry and biology, the strength of the attaction between two substances, such as two chemicals, or an antigen and an antibody.
Source: dana-farber.org (offline)

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Affinity


Antibody affinity refers to the tendency of an antibody to bind to a specific epitope at the surface of an antigen, ie, to the strength of the interaction.
Source: poultrymed.com

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Affinity


A measure of the binding strength between two molecules.
Source: dddmag.com (offline)

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Affinity


A conversion figure between the base audience rating and the target audience rating. E.g. An index of 126 for target audience Adults 15-34 against a base audience of Adults 15+ means 15-34s obtained a 26% higher rating than the base average across all Adults 15+.
Source: agbnielsen.net (offline)

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Affinity


1. An inherent likeness or relationship. 2. A special attraction for a specific element, organ or structure. 3. <chemistry> The force that binds atoms in molecules, the tendency of substances to combine by chemical reaction. 4. The strength of noncovalent chemical binding between two substances as measured by the dissociation constant of the [..]
Source: mondofacto.com (offline)

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Affinity


Affinity is the association of a computer or network device to its credentials as established by ServiceNow Discovery or Orchestration. Once a device is matched with its credentials, the relationship [..]
Source: wiki.servicenow.com

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Affinity


Affinity, sometimes called “liking,” means that people tend to follow and emulate those people whom they find attractive or otherwise desirable. If we like someone, we are more likely to say yes to their requests or to internalize their beliefs and actions as our own.
Source: tracytuten.com (offline)

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Affinity


A brainstorming approach that encourages less verbal members of a group to participate. First, all members of the group write responses to the problem or question on separate cards, then the cards are [..]
Source: beesburg.com

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Affinity


Exists when the various stores at a given location complement, blend, and cooperate with one another, and each benefits from the others' presence.
Source: prenhall.com (offline)





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