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The market's compound
construction is such that two waves of a particular degree
subdivide into eight waves of the next lower degree, and
those eight waves subdivide in exactly the same manner into
thirty-four waves of the next lower degree. The Wave Principle,
then, reflects the fact that waves of any degree in any series
always subdivide and re-subdivide into waves of lesser degree
and simultaneously are components of waves of higher degree.
Thus, we can use Figure 1-3 to illustrate two waves, eight waves
or thirty-four waves, depending upon the degree to which we are
referring.
Now observe that within the
corrective pattern illustrated as wave [2] in Figure 1-3, waves
(a) and (c), which point downward, are composed of five waves:
1, 2, 3, 4 and 5. Similarly, wave (b), which points upward, is
composed of three waves: a, b and c. This construction discloses
a crucial point: that motive waves do not always point upward,
and corrective waves do not always point downward. The mode of a
wave is determined not by its absolute direction but primarily
by its relative direction. Aside from four specific
exceptions, which will be discussed later in this course, waves
divide in motive mode (five waves) when trending in the
same direction as the wave of one larger degree of which it is a
part, and in corrective mode (three waves or a variation)
when trending in the opposite direction. Waves (a) and (c) are
motive, trending in the same direction as wave [2]. Wave
(b) is corrective because it corrects wave (a) and is countertrend
to wave [2]. In summary, the essential underlying tendency
of the Wave Principle is that action in the same direction as
the one larger trend develops in five waves, while reaction
against the one larger trend develops in three waves, at all
degrees of trend.
*Note: For this course, all
Primary degree numbers and letters normally denoted by circles
are shown with brackets.
Essential Concepts

Figure 1-4
The phenomena of form, degree
and relative direction are carried one step further
in Figure 1-4. This illustration reflects the general principle
that in any market cycle, waves will subdivide as shown in the
following table. |