regularity (noun)
71frequency — noun common occurrence, commonness, continuity, crebritas, cycle, frequence, frequentia, periodicity, prevalence, rate, recurrence, regularity, regularity of recurrence, repetition, repetitiveness, succession, usualness Burton s Legal Thesaurus.… …
72uniformity — I noun absence of diversity, absence of variation, conformity, consistency, constancy, continuity, equability, evenness, homogeneity, levelness, order, persistence, regularity, singleness, smoothness, stability, standardization, symmetry, unity… …
73consistency — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. solidity, density; harmony, correspondence. See agreement, regularity. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [Harmony] Syn. congruity, agreement, union, correspondence, uniformity, accord, appropriateness, unity,… …
74order — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) I n. orderliness (see order); command; class, kind, rank; society, fellowship, guild (see party); succession, sequence. II Prescribed mode of procedure Nouns 1. order, orderliness, regularity, uniformity …
75roughness — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Quality of not being smooth or even Nouns 1. roughness, unevenness, ruggedness, asperity, rugosity, corrugation, nodosity, nodulation, hairiness, arborescence, tooth, grain, texture, ripple. 2. (hairlike …
76system — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. coordination, organization, routine, arrangement, method, scheme, plan; classification; complex. See order, regularity. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [Order] Syn. orderliness, regularity, conformity, logical… …
77consecutive — consecutive, successive, sequent, sequential, serial are comparable when meaning following one after the other in order. Consecutive and successive apply to objects which follow one another without interruption or break. But consecutive is… …
78Metatypy — (English pronunciation: /mɨˈtætɨpi/) is a type of morphosyntactic and semantic language change brought about by language contact involving multilingual speakers. The term was coined by linguist Malcolm Ross. Malcolm Ross (1999: 7, 1) gives the… …
79order — or·der 1 n 1: a state of peace, freedom from unruly behavior, and respect for law and proper authority maintain law and order 2: an established mode or state of procedure a call to order 3 a: a mandate from a superior authority see also …
80Dummy pronoun — A dummy pronoun (formally: expletive pronoun or pleonastic pronoun) is a type of pronoun used in non pro drop languages, such as English. It is used when a particular verb argument (or preposition) is nonexistent (it could also be unknown,… …