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Concrete vs Concretization - What's the difference?

concrete | concretization | Related terms |

Concrete is a related term of concretization.


As an adjective concrete

is .

As a noun concretization is

(uncountable) the process of concretizing]] a general principle or idea by delineating, [[particularize|particularizing, or exemplifying it.

concrete

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • Particular, perceivable, real.
  • Fuzzy videotapes and distorted sound recordings are not concrete evidence that bigfoot exists.
  • * {{quote-news
  • , year=2011 , date=December 16 , author=Denis Campbell , title=Hospital staff 'lack skills to cope with dementia patients' , work=Guardian citation , page= , passage=Professor Peter Crome, chair of the audit's steering group, said the report "provides further concrete evidence that the care of patients with dementia in hospital is in need of a radical shake-up". While a few hospitals had risen to the challenge of improving patients' experiences, many have not, he said. The report recommends that all staff receive basic dementia awareness training, and staffing levels should be maintained to help such patients.}}
  • Not abstract.
  • Once arrested, I realized that handcuffs are concrete , even if my concept of what is legal wasn’t.
  • * John Stuart Mill
  • The names of individuals are concrete , those of classes abstract.
  • * I. Watts
  • Concrete terms, while they express the quality, do also express, or imply, or refer to, some subject to which it belongs.
  • United in growth; hence, formed by coalition of separate particles into one mass; united in a solid form.
  • * Bishop Burnet
  • The first concrete state, or consistent surface, of the chaos must be of the same figure as the last liquid state.
  • Made of concrete building material.
  • The office building had concrete flower boxes out front.

    Synonyms

    * (perceivable) tangible * (not abstract) tangible

    Antonyms

    * (perceivable) intangible * (not abstract) intangible, abstract

    Noun

    (wikipedia concrete) (-)
  • A building material created by mixing cement, water, and aggregate including gravel and sand.
  • The road was made of concrete that had been poured in large slabs.
  • A solid mass formed by the coalescence of separate particles.
  • * 1661 , , p. 26:
  • "...upon the suppos’d (term) made by the fire, of the former sort of Concretes , there are wont to emerge Bodies resembling those which they take for the Elements...
  • (US) A dessert of frozen custard with various toppings.
  • * 2010 , June Naylor, Judy Wiley, Insiders' Guide to Dallas and Fort Worth (page 54)
  • Besides cones, Curley's serves sundaes, and concretes —custard with all sorts of yummy goodness blended in, like pecans, caramel, almonds,
  • * John Lutz, Diamond Eyes (page 170)
  • When Nudger and Claudia were finished eating they drove to the Ted Drewes frozen custard stand on Chippewa and stood in line for a couple of chocolate chip concretes .
  • (logic) A term designating both a quality and the subject in which it exists; a concrete term.
  • * John Stuart Mill
  • The concretes "father" and "son" have, or might have, the abstracts "paternity" and "filiety".
  • Sugar boiled down from cane juice to a solid mass.
  • Derived terms

    * -crete * reinforced concrete * shotcrete

    See also

    * cement * mortar * UHPC

    Verb

    (concret)
  • To cover with or encase in concrete; often constructed as concrete over .
  • I hate grass, so I concreted over my lawn.
  • To solidify.
  • Josie’s plans began concreting once she fixed a date for the wedding.
  • To unite or coalesce, as separate particles, into a mass or solid body.
  • * Arbuthnot
  • The blood of some who died of the plague could not be made to concrete .

    Derived terms

    * concrete jungle * concretion * concretize/concretise * concrete canyon ----

    concretization

    English

    Alternative forms

    * concretisation

    Noun

  • (uncountable) The process of concretizing]] a general principle or idea by delineating, [[particularize, particularizing, or exemplifying it.
  • * 1934 , J. Tinbergen, "Annual Survey of Significant Developments in General Economic Theory," Econometrica , vol. 2, no. 1, p. 25:
  • There are certain fields in general economics that are at present not so much in need of a broadening of the theoretical basis as in need of a minute working-out and concretization .
  • * 1961 , H. Kelsen, General Theory of Law and State , p. 237:
  • [Law] proceeds from the general (abstract) to the individual (particular); it is a process of increasing individualization and concretization .
  • (countable) Something specific which is the result of a process of concretizing a general principle or idea.
  • * 1979 , Trudy Scott, "Stuart Sherman's Singular Spectacles," The Drama Review: TDR , vol. 23, no. 1, p. 75:
  • This movement gave Sherman his first image—a roller skate—a concretization of pure motion.
  • * 1993 , Lubomír Doležel, "Semiotic Poetics of the Prague School," in Irene Rima Makaryk (ed.) Encyclopedia of Contemporary Literary Theory: Approaches, Scholars, Terms , ISBN 9780802068606, p. 182 (Google preview):
  • Vodicka's reception history is an empirical study of the post-genesis fortunes of literary works as attested in recorded concretizations (diaries, memoirs, letters, critical reviews, and essays).
  • (uncountable, medicine, psychology) An inability to generalize or perform abstraction accompanied by excessive concentration on specific details, as in a mental disorder or in cognition by children.
  • * 1969 , E. Drage and B. Lange, "Ethical Considerations in the Use of Patients for Demonstration," The American Journal of Nursing , vol. 69, no. 10, p. 2165:
  • Another [patient] commented on the fact that the consultant had referred to two of them as "boys" in the demonstration. The concretization of a schizophrenic is exemplified here. One man thought this word meant that the consultant, in order "to keep things on the level of boy-girl, wanted everyone else to consider her as a girl, so the boys and girls could communicate."

    Usage notes

    * Concretization' and '''concretion''' are rough synonyms but are usually not used interchangeably. '''Concretization''' is more commonly used to refer to a particular embodiment of a general concept or to the process which creates it. ' Concretion is more commonly used to refer to a physical, especially geological, object or to the physical process which creates it.

    Antonyms

    * abstraction

    References

    *" concretization" at OneLook® Dictionary Search .