Ap"pe*ten*cy (&?;), n.; pl.
Appetencies (&?;). [L. appetentia, fr.
appetere to strive after, long for. See Appetite.]
1. Fixed and strong desire; esp. natural desire; a
craving; an eager appetite.
They had a strong appetency for reading.
Merivale.
2. Specifically: An instinctive inclination or
propensity in animals to perform certain actions, as in the young to suck,
in aquatic fowls to enter into water and to swim; the tendency of an
organized body to seek what satisfies the wants of its organism.
These lacteals have mouths, and by animal selection or
appetency the absorb such part of the fluid as is agreeable to their
palate.
E. Darwin.
3. Natural tendency; affinity; attraction; -- used
of inanimate objects.