Bonding vs Connection - What's the difference?
bonding | connection |
As nouns the difference between bonding and connection is that bonding is the act by which something is bonded while connection is (uncountable) the act of connecting. As a verb bonding is .
bonding English
Verb
(head)
Noun
( en noun)
The act by which something is bonded.
* 1998 , Walter Frederick Buckley, Society - a Complex Adaptive System: Essays in Social Theory
- A systems view of reality allows one to see that it is made of successive layers of bonded elements, each layer with properties emergent from the previous one: atoms are particular bondings of more elementary particles
A method of aggregating multiple network interfaces on a computer into a single logical interface
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connection English
Alternative forms
* connexion , (abbreviation)
Noun
(uncountable) The act of connecting.
The point at which two or more things are connected.
- the connection between overeating and obesity
- My headache has no connection with me going out last night.
* {{quote-news
, year=2004
, date=April 15
, author=
, title=Morning swoop in hunt for Jodi's killer
, work=The Scotsman
citation
, page=
, passage=A spokesman for Lothian and Borders Police said: "We can confirm that a 15-year-old boy has been arrested and charged in connection with the murder of Jodi Jones. A 45-year-old has also been arrested in connection with allegations of attempting to pervert the course of justice. A report on this has been sent to the procurator fiscal." }}
A feeling of understanding and ease of communication between two or more people.
- As we were the only people in the room to laugh at the joke, I felt a connection between us.
An established communications or transportation link.
- computers linked by a network connection
- I was talking to him, but there was lightning and we lost the connection .
(transport) A transfer from one transportation vehicle to another in scheduled transportation service
- The bus was late so he missed his connection at Penn Station and had to wait six hours for the next train.
A kinship relationship between people.
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