Definition of VALENCY

valency

Plural: valencies

Noun

  • The combining power of an element, equivalent to valence.
  • the phenomenon of forming chemical bonds
  • (biology) a relative capacity to unite or react or interact as with antigens or a biological substrate
  • (chemistry) a property of atoms or radicals; their combining power given in terms of the number of hydrogen atoms (or the equivalent)
  • Alternative form of valence (“the combining capacity of an atom, functional group, or radical determined by the number of atoms of hydrogen with which it will unite, or the number of electrons that it will gain, lose, or share when it combines with other atoms, etc.”).
  • Alternative form of valence (“the combining capacity of an atom, functional group, or radical determined by the number of atoms of hydrogen with which it will unite, or the number of electrons that it will gain, lose, or share when it combines with other atoms, etc.”).
  • The capacity of something to combine with other things, as for example the capability of a vaccine as measured by the number of pathogen serotypes that it can counteract.
  • The number of edges connected to a vertex in a graph.
  • Alternative form of valence (“the number of arguments that a verb can have, including its subject, ranging from zero to three or, less commonly, four”).
  • Importance, significance.

Examples

  • The VALENCY of the ’S’ tile allowed him to connect several small words for a huge score.
  • vaccine valency

Origin / Etymology

From Late Latin valentia and Latin valentia (“bodily strength; health; vigour”) + English -y (suffix forming abstract nouns denoting a condition, quality, or state). Valentia is derived from valēns (“healthy, strong, vigorous”) + -ia (suffix forming feminine abstract nouns); while valēns is the present active participle of valeō (“to be healthy, sound, or well; to be strong; to have influence or power, etc.”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₂welh₁- (“to rule; powerful, strong”).
Sense 1 (“combining capacity of an atom”) and sense 3 (“number of arguments a verb can have”) are possibly from valence + -y.

Synonyms

valence, degree

Scrabble Score: 15

valency: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Word
valency: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
valency: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary

Words With Friends Score: 18

valency: valid Words With Friends Word