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Commence vs Economics - What's the difference?

commence | economics |

As a verb commence

is .

As an adjective economics is

.

commence

English

Verb

(commenc)
  • To begin, start.
  • * (William Shakespeare)
  • Here the anthem doth commence .
  • * (Oliver Goldsmith)
  • His heaven commences ere the world be past.
  • * , chapter=4
  • , title= Mr. Pratt's Patients , passage=Then he commenced to talk, really talk. and inside of two flaps of a herring's fin he had me mesmerized, like Eben Holt's boy at the town hall show. He talked about the ills of humanity, and the glories of health and Nature and service and land knows what all.}}
  • To begin to be, or to act as.
  • * (Samuel Taylor Coleridge)
  • We commence judges ourselves.
  • (UK, intransitive, dated) To take a degree at a university.
  • * Fuller
  • I question whether the formality of commencing was used in that age.

    Antonyms

    * cease * stop

    economics

    Alternative forms

    * (archaic)

    Noun

    (-)
  • (social sciences) The study of resource allocation, distribution and consumption; of capital and investment; and of management of the factors of production.
  • * {{quote-magazine, date=2013-08-03, volume=408, issue=8847, magazine=(The Economist)
  • , title= Boundary problems , passage=Economics is a messy discipline: too fluid to be a science, too rigorous to be an art. Perhaps it is fitting that economists’ most-used metric, gross domestic product (GDP), is a tangle too.}}

    Synonyms

    * dismal science * See also

    Derived terms

    * -nomics