period or period..
(Of thelat. )periodus, and this of theGr. pe?d??).
1. m. time something takes to return to the State or position had at the outset.
2. m space of time which includes the duration of something.
3. m. Menstruo of women and the females of certain animals.
4. m. Cronol. Cycle time. Julian, of tropical period
Time it takes for a periodic phenomenon to cover all its phases, which uses a pendulum in its movement of sway, the land in its movement around the Sun, etc.6. m. Gram. Set of prayers that linked with one another grammatically, acquire complete sense. U.-more referring to the conditional, concesivas or similar constructions.
7. m. Mat. Figure or group of figures that recur indefinitely after the integer quotient, inaccurate divisions.
8. m. Med. Time lasting phenomena observed in the course of the disease.