0 an important connection between the parts of a system or a group of things: --
Times Square is the nexus of the New York subway.
But all do so with the same purpose: determining the causal structure of the world as a calculable nexus of forces.
In particular, it is the nexus family-civil society, civil society-state, family-state that seems to cry out for greater attention and analytical clarity.
It is the first volume to attempt to create a nexus between the theoretical constructs and practical applications of this new area of language testing.
This is a local subject that has much wider implications for the nexus of politics and religion in the period.
Rather, it examines the nexus between the office, regimes of visual surveillance, and the construction of middle-class male heterosexual identity.
In less complex animals, moreover, there is likely to be a fairly tight nexus between sensory data input and specific behaviors.
In this context, there are several arguments in favour of transcending locality, or stretching the margins of the geographical nexus between land and locality.
The development of the inner-city race-drugs nexus began with the outflow of wealth and tax revenues caused by suburbanisation.