01 a. United in growth; hence, formed by coalition of separate particles into one mass; united in a solid form.
-
1.
United in growth; hence, formed by coalition of separate particles into one mass; united in a solid form.“The first concrete state, or consistent surface, of the chaos must be of the same figure as the last liquid state.” — Bp. Burnet.
-
2.
Standing for an object as it exists in nature, invested with all its qualities, as distinguished from standing for an attribute of an object; -- opposed to abstract.(Logic)“Concrete is opposed to abstract. The names of individuals are concrete, those of classes abstract.” — J. S. Mill.“Concrete terms, while they express the quality, do also express, or imply, or refer to, some subject to which it belongs.” — I. Watts.
Phrases & compounds
Concrete number —
a number associated with, or applied to, a particular object, as three men, five days, etc., as distinguished from an abstract number, or one used without reference to a particular object.
Concrete quantity —
a physical object or a collection of such objects.
Concrete science —
a physical science, one having as its subject of knowledge concrete things instead of abstract laws.
Concrete sound [or] movement of the voice —
one which slides continuously up or down, as distinguished from a discrete movement, in which the voice leaps at once from one line of pitch to another.