valence
nounThe combining capacity of an atom or group of atoms as determined by the number of electrons it can lose, add, or share when it reacts with other atoms or groups.
nounAn integer used to represent this capacity, which may be given as positive or negative depending on whether electrons are lost or gained, respectively.
nounThe number of binding sites of a molecule, such as an antibody or antigen.
nounThe number of different antigens contained in a vaccine, corresponding to the number of pathogens that it is active against.
nounThe degree of attraction or aversion that an individual feels toward a specific object or event.
nounThe number and type of arguments that a lexical item, especially a verb, can combine with to make a syntactically well-formed sentence, often along with a description of the categories of those constituents. Intransitive verbs (appear, arrive) have a valence of one—the subject; some transitive verbs (paint, touch), two—the subject and direct object; other transitive verbs (ask, give), three—the subject, direct object, and indirect object.
nounThe capacity of something to unite, react, or interact with something else.
nounIn chem., the relative saturating or combining capacity of an atom compared with the standard hydrogen atom; the quality or force which determines the number of atoms with which any single atom will chemically unite.
nounIn biology: Form value; morphological value or equivalency. See