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alliance


9 definitions found

alliance - Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 :

  Alliance \Al*li"ance\, v. t.
     To connect by alliance; to ally. [Obs.]
     [1913 Webster]

  Alliance \Al*li"ance\, n. [OE. aliaunce, OF. aliance, F.
     alliance, fr. OF. alier, F. allier. See Ally, and cf. LL.
     alligantia.]
     1. The state of being allied; the act of allying or uniting;
        a union or connection of interests between families,
        states, parties, etc., especially between families by
        marriage and states by compact, treaty, or league; as,
        matrimonial alliances; an alliance between church and
        state; an alliance between France and England.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     2. Any union resembling that of families or states; union by
        relationship in qualities; affinity.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              The alliance of the principles of the world with
              those of the gospel.                  --C. J. Smith.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              The alliance . . . between logic and metaphysics.
                                                    --Mansel.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     3. The persons or parties allied. --Udall.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     Syn: Connection; affinity; union; confederacy; confederation;
          league; coalition.
          [1913 Webster]

alliance - WordNet (r) 2.1 (2005) :

  alliance
      n 1: the state of being allied or confederated [syn: alliance,
           confederation]
      2: a connection based on kinship or marriage or common interest;
         "the shifting alliances within a large family"; "their
         friendship constitutes a powerful bond between them" [syn:
         alliance, bond]
      3: an organization of people (or countries) involved in a pact
         or treaty [syn: alliance, coalition, alignment,
         alinement] [ant: nonalignment, nonalinement]
      4: a formal agreement establishing an association or alliance
         between nations or other groups to achieve a particular aim
      5: the act of forming an alliance or confederation [syn:
         confederation, alliance]

alliance - Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (26 May 2007) :

  ALLIANCE
  
     <tool> A complete set of CAD tools for teaching Digital
     CMOS VLSI Design in Universities.  It includes a VHDL
     compiler and simulator, logic synthesis tools, and automatic
     place and route tools.  ALLIANCE is the result of a ten years
     effort at University Pierre et Marie Curie (PARIS VI, France).
  
     It runs on Sun-4, not well supported: MIPS/Ultrix,
     386/SystemV.
  
     Current version: 1.1, as of 1993-02-16.
  
     (1993-02-16)
  

alliance - Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary :

  Alliance
  a treaty between nations, or between individuals, for their
  mutual advantage.
  
    Abraham formed an alliance with some of the Canaanitish
  princes (Gen. 14:13), also with Abimelech (21:22-32). Joshua and
  the elders of Israel entered into an alliance with the
  Gibeonites (Josh. 9:3-27). When the Israelites entered Palestine
  they were forbidden to enter into alliances with the inhabitants
  of the country (Lev. 18:3, 4; 20:22, 23).
  
    Solomon formed a league with Hiram (1 Kings 5:12). This
  "brotherly covenant" is referred to 250 years afterwards (Amos
  1:9). He also appears to have entered into an alliance with
  Pharaoh (1 Kings 10:28, 29).
  
    In the subsequent history of the kingdoms of Judah and Israel
  various alliances were formed between them and also with
  neighbouring nations at different times.
  
    From patriarchal times a covenant of alliance was sealed by
  the blood of some sacrificial victim. The animal sacrificed was
  cut in two (except birds), and between these two parts the
  persons contracting the alliance passed (Gen. 15:10). There are
  frequent allusions to this practice (Jer. 34:18). Such alliances
  were called "covenants of salt" (Num. 18:19; 2 Chr. 13:5), salt
  being the symbol of perpetuity. A pillar was set up as a
  memorial of the alliance between Laban and Jacob (Gen. 31:52).
  The Jews throughout their whole history attached great
  importance to fidelity to their engagements. Divine wrath fell
  upon the violators of them (Josh. 9:18; 2 Sam. 21:1, 2; Ezek.
  17:16).

alliance - U.S. Gazetteer (1990) :

  Alliance, NC (town, FIPS 1000)
    Location: 35.14448 N, 76.80789 W
    Population (1990): 583 (256 housing units)
    Area: 5.0 sq km (land), 0.0 sq km (water)
  Alliance, NE (city, FIPS 905)
    Location: 42.10037 N, 102.87393 W
    Population (1990): 9765 (4108 housing units)
    Area: 12.2 sq km (land), 0.0 sq km (water)
    Zip code(s): 69301
  Alliance, OH (city, FIPS 1420)
    Location: 40.91110 N, 81.11715 W
    Population (1990): 23376 (9598 housing units)
    Area: 21.6 sq km (land), 0.0 sq km (water)
    Zip code(s): 44601

alliance - Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856) :

  ALLIANCE, international law. A contract, treaty, or league between two
  sovereigns or states, made to insure their safety and common defence.
       2. Alliances made for warlike purposes are divided in general into
  defensive and offensive; in the former the nation only engages to defend her
  ally in case he be attacked; in the latter she unites with him for the
  purpose of making an attack, or jointly waging the war against another
  nation. Some alliances are both offensive and defensive; and there seldom is
  an offensive alliance which is not also defensive. Vattel, B. 3, c. 6, Sec.
  79; 2 Dall. 15.
  
  

  ALLIANCE, relationship. The union or connexion of two persons or families by
  marriage, which is also called affinity. This is derived from the Latin
  preposition ad and ligare, to bind. Vide Inst 1, 10, 6; Dig 38, 10, 4, 3;
  and Affinity.
  
  

alliance - Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 :

  266 Moby Thesaurus words for "alliance":
     Anschluss, Bund, NATO, Rochdale cooperative, SEATO,
     a world-without-end bargain, accompaniment, accord, accordance,
     addition, adjunct, affairs, affiliation, affinity, agglomeration,
     aggregation, agnation, agreement, alignment, alikeness,
     amalgamation, analogy, ancestry, anschluss, aping, approach,
     approximation, assemblage, assimilation, association, axis, band,
     bed, blend, blending, bloc, blood, blood relationship, body, bond,
     bond of matrimony, bridebed, brotherhood, brothership, cabal,
     cahoots, capitulation, cartel, centralization, closeness, club,
     co-working, coaction, coadunation, coalescence, coalition,
     cognation, cohabitation, coincidence, collaboration, colleagueship,
     collectivity, college, collegialism, collegiality, collusion,
     combination, combine, combined effort, combo, common ancestry,
     common descent, common market, community, comparability,
     comparison, composition, comradeship, concert, concerted action,
     concomitance, concord, concordance, concordat, concourse,
     concurrence, confederacy, confederation, confluence, conformity,
     confraternity, congeries, conglomeration, conjugal bond,
     conjugal knot, conjugation, conjunction, connectedness, connection,
     consanguinity, consilience, consolidation, conspiracy,
     consumer cooperative, contiguity, contrariety, convention,
     cooperation, cooperative, cooperative society, copartnership,
     copartnery, copying, corps, correspondence, council, cousinhood,
     cousinship, coverture, credit union, customs union, dealings,
     deduction, disjunction, economic community, ecumenism, embodiment,
     enation, encompassment, enosis, entente, entente cordiale,
     fatherhood, federalization, federation, fellowship, filiation,
     fraternalism, fraternity, fraternization, free trade area,
     freemasonry, fusion, gang, group, grouping, holy matrimony,
     holy wedlock, homology, hookup, husbandhood, identity,
     ill-assorted marriage, imitation, inclusion, incorporation,
     integration, intercourse, intermarriage, international agreement,
     interracial marriage, intimacy, junction, junta, kindred, kinship,
     league, liaison, likeness, likening, link, linkage, linking,
     machine, marriage, marriage bed, marriage sacrament, match,
     maternity, matrilineage, matriliny, matrimonial union, matrimony,
     matrisib, matrocliny, meld, melding, merger, mesalliance, metaphor,
     mimicking, misalliance, miscegenation, mixed marriage, mob,
     motherhood, mutual attraction, mutual-defense treaty, nearness,
     nonaggression pact, nuptial bond, order, package, package deal,
     pact, paction, parallelism, parasitism, parity, partnership,
     paternity, patrilineage, patriliny, patrisib, patrocliny,
     political machine, propinquity, proximity, rapport, relatedness,
     relation, relations, relationship, resemblance, ring,
     sacrament of matrimony, sameness, saprophytism, semblance, sibship,
     similarity, simile, similitude, simulation, simultaneity,
     sisterhood, sistership, society, sodality, solidification,
     sorority, spousehood, symbiosis, sympathy, synchronism, syncretism,
     syndication, syneresis, synergy, synthesis, tie, tie-in, tie-up,
     ties of blood, treaty, unification, union, united action, unity,
     wedded bliss, wedded state, weddedness, wedding, wedding knot,
     wedlock, wifehood