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Defunct vs Fungible - What's the difference?

defunct | fungible |

As adjectives the difference between defunct and fungible

is that defunct is deceased, dead while fungible is (finance|and|commerce) able to be substituted for something of equal value or utility; interchangeable, exchangeable, replaceable.

As nouns the difference between defunct and fungible

is that defunct is the dead person (referred to) while fungible is (chiefly|in the plural) any fungible item.

As a verb defunct

is to make defunct.

defunct

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • Deceased, dead.
  • * Shakespeare
  • defunct organs
  • * Byron
  • The boar, defunct , lay tripped up, near.
  • No longer in use, inactive.
  • (computing) Specifically, of a program: that has terminated but is still shown in the list of processes because the parent process that created it is still running and has not yet reaped it. See also zombie, zombie process.
  • (business) No longer in business or service.
  • Verb

    (en verb)
  • To make defunct.
  • Noun

  • The dead person (referred to).
  • * 1817 September , in Blackwood's Edinburgh magazine , volume 1, page 617:
  • fungible

    English

    (Fungibility)

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • (finance, and, commerce) Able to be substituted for something of equal value or utility; interchangeable, exchangeable, replaceable.
  • * 1876 [1877], , Silver and Gold and Their Relation to the Problem of Resumption , page 116:
  • Gold is fungible'. Silver is ' fungible ; that is, these metals are both so homogeneous that, if I get a pound of pure gold, for example, it is indifferent to me whether it be this pound or that pound, one is as good as another
  • * 2011 , Will Self, “The frowniest spot on Earth”, London Review of Books , XXXIII.9:
  • At the core of Kasarda’s conception of the aerotropolis lies the notion that space – unlike time – is fungible .

    Derived terms

    * (l)

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (chiefly, in the plural) Any fungible item.
  • References

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