Behaving vs Behavior - What's the difference?
behaving | behavior |
(philosophy) behaviour
* 1998 , Daniel W. Conway, ?Peter S. Groff, Nietzsche: The world as will to power (page 315)
(uncountable) Human conduct relative to social norms.
(uncountable) The way a living creature behaves or acts generally.
(uncountable, informal) A state of probation about one's conduct.
(countable) An instance of the way a living creature behaves.
(countable, uncountable, biology, psychology) Observable response produced by an organism.
(uncountable) The way a device or system operates.
As nouns the difference between behaving and behavior
is that behaving is behaviour while behavior is human conduct relative to social norms.As a verb behaving
is present participle of lang=en.behaving
English
Verb
(head)Noun
(en noun)- For any such thing can play the role in an individual life which philosophers have thought could, or at least should, be played only by things which were universal, common to us all. It can symbolise the blind impress all our behavings bear.
behavior
English
Alternative forms
* behaviour (everywhere except US) * (l), (l), (l), (l)Noun
(en-noun)- He was on his best behavior when her family visited.
