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Conjunction vs Concatenate - What's the difference?

conjunction | concatenate |

As a noun conjunction

is the act of joining, or condition of being joined.

As a verb concatenate is

to join or link together, as though in a chain.

conjunction

Noun

(en noun)
  • The act of joining, or condition of being joined.
  • (obsolete) Sexual intercourse.
  • *, vol.1. ch.29:
  • Certaine Nations (and amongst others, the Mahometane) abhorre Conjunction with women great with childe.
  • (grammar) A word used to join other words or phrases together into sentences. The specific conjunction used shows how the two joined parts are related. Example: Bread, butter and cheese.
  • (astronomy) The alignment of two bodies in the solar system such that they have the same longitude when seen from Earth.
  • (astrology) An aspect in which planets are in close proximity to one another.
  • (logic) The proposition resulting from the combination of two or more propositions using the (\and) operator.
  • Coordinate terms

    * (in logic) disjunction

    Hypernyms

    * (in logic) logical connective

    Meronyms

    * (in logic) conjunct

    Derived terms

    * inferior conjunction * superior conjunction * conjunctive normal form

    See also

    * disjunction

    concatenate

    English

    (Wikipedia)

    Verb

    (concatenat)
  • To join or link together, as though in a chain.
  • * 2003 , Roy Porter, Flesh in the Age of Reason , (Penguin 2004), page 182)
  • Locke, by contrast, contended that [madness] was essentially a question of intellectual delusion , the capture of the mind by false ideas concatenated into a logical system of unreality.
  • Computer instruction to join two strings together.
  • Concatenating "Man" with " is mortal" gives "Man is mortal"
    The Unix program is used to concatenate and display files. Its name comes from the word catenate.

    Derived terms

    * concatenation * concatenative