English edit

Etymology edit

From Latin connumeratio, from Latin connumerare, connumeratum (to number with).

Noun edit

connumeration (usually uncountable, plural connumerations)

  1. A reckoning or counting together.
    • a. 1822, Thomas Fanshaw Middleton, The Doctrine of the Greek Article:
      He is arguing against a sophism which turned on the difference between connumeration and subnumeration: it was contended, that persons or things equal in dignity and homousian are connumerated []