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Commencement vs Provenance - What's the difference?

commencement | provenance |

As nouns the difference between commencement and provenance

is that commencement is the first existence of anything; act or fact of commencing; rise; origin; beginning; start while provenance is place or source of origin.

commencement

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • The first existence of anything; act or fact of commencing; rise; origin; beginning; start.
  • The time of Henry VII ... nearly coincides with the commencement of what is termed modern history. -allam.
    1800 , William Took, View of the Russian empire during the reign of Catharine the Second
  • :: Yet from the commencement of mining there have been unnoble proprietors of mines, who belonged to the class of merchants.
  • The day when degrees are conferred by colleges and universities upon students and others.
  • A graduation ceremony, from a school, college or university.
  • Coordinate terms

    * (graduation ceremony) (l)

    References

    * English contranyms ----

    provenance

    English

    Noun

    (wikipedia provenance) (en noun)
  • Place or source of origin.
  • Many supermarkets display the provenance of their food products.
  • (archaeology) The place and time of origin of some artifact or other object. See Usage note below.
  • This spear is of Viking provenance .
  • (arts) The history of ownership of a work of art
  • The picture is of royal provenance .
  • (computing) The copy history of a piece of data, or the intermediate pieces of data utilized to compute a final data element, as in a database record or web site (data provenance)
  • (computing) The execution history of computer processes which were utilized to compute a final piece of data (process provenance)
  • (of a person) Background; history; place of origin; ancestry.
  • See also

    * provenience

    Usage notes

    * The term provenience in archaeology has largely replaced provenance'' because ''provenience'' is restricted to in situ location at the date of archaeological discovery rather than the "origin-to-present" chain of custody details of proper ''provenance as is customarily used by historians, museums, and commercial entities.