Dem vs Dex - What's the difference?
dem | dex |
* {{quote-news, 2007, February 25, Sia Michel, Stephen Marley in Tallahassee, M.I.A. in India and Klaxons on Fire, New York Times
, passage=Go tell dem natty dreadlocks no wear handcuff,” advises Damian Marley, his guest star and younger brother, who accuses the officers of jealousy.}}
(in the sense of "those")
(clitic, postfix) A group of.
* 2009 , ,
* 2010 , ,
(physics, and, astrophysics) An order or factor of ten. Used both to refer to the function and the number of (possibly fractional) orders of magnitude separating two numbers. When dealing with log to the base 10 transform of a number set the transform of 10, 100, and 1 000 000 is , , and , so the difference between 10 and 100 in base 10 is 1 dex and the difference between 1 and 1 000 000 is 6 dex.
* 2004 , Cartledge et al 2004, The Homogeneity of Interstellar Oxygen in the Galactic Disk'', Abstract, ''The Astrophysical Journal , Volume 613, Issue 2,
(informal) dextromethorphan
(gaming) dexterity
* 2000 , "Billy Shields", The truth about offhand procs'' (on newsgroup ''alt.games.everquest )
As a pronoun dem
is nonstandard spelling of lang=en.As a determiner dem
is nonstandard spelling of lang=en (in the sense of "those".As an abbreviation Dem
is democrat.As an initialism DEM
is (in orthophotography) Digital Elevation Model.As a noun dex is
an order or factor of ten. Used both to refer to the function and the number of (possibly fractional) orders of magnitude separating two numbers. When dealing with log to the base 10 transform of a number set the transform of 10, 100, and 1 000 000 is , , and , so the difference between 10 and 100 in base 10 is 1 dex and the difference between 1 and 1 000 000 is 6 dex.dem
English
Pronoun
(English Pronouns)citation
Determiner
(en determiner)- What are dem fings doing 'ere?
- Chillin' wiv da man dem
- Jammin' wiv da man dem
- It's all good in the hood wiv da man dem
- I’ve got my peeps dem with me shouting pull up your socks,
- Cos we just broke the law and now we're running from cops.
Anagrams
* ----dex
English
Etymology 1
Contraction of "decimal exponent".Noun
(dexes)pp. 1037-1048,
- The data points for low-
paths are scattered more widely than those for denser sight lines, because O/H ratios for such paths shorter than 800 pc are generally about 0.10 dex lower than the values for longer ones.
See also
* order of magnitude, decibelEtymology 2
By shortening.Noun
(-)Etymology 3
By shortening.Noun
(-)- Establish a proccing percentage of a weapon by putting it in the primary hand and then put it in your offhand and check the proccing percentage with varying levels of dual wield skill (while keeping level and dex constant).
