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Enshrine vs Valuation - What's the difference?

enshrine | valuation |

As a verb enshrine

is to enclose (a sacred relic etc) in a shrine or chest.

As a noun valuation is

an estimation of something's worth.

enshrine

English

Verb

(enshrin)
  • To enclose (a sacred relic etc.) in a shrine or chest.
  • To preserve or cherish (something) as though in a shrine; to preserve or contain, especially with some reverence.
  • *2009 , (Diarmaid MacCulloch), A History of Christianity , Penguin 2010, p. 256:
  • *:At the centre of Muhammad's achievement was the extraordinary poetry which enshrined his revelations.
  • To protect an idea, ideal, or philosophy within an official law or treaty
  • Other measures, such as compensation for victims, will be enshrined in the proposed new law.

    valuation

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • An estimation of something's worth.
  • (finance) The process of estimating the market value of a financial asset or liability.
  • * 1993 , Historic American Building Survey, Town of Clayburg: Refractories Company Town , National Park Service, page 4:
  • The tax assessor put them in fourteen valuation groups ranging from one two-story brick house and two one-and-a-half-story houses to the largest groups of eighteen two-story houses and twenty-four one-story bungalows.
  • (logic, propositional logic, model theory) An assignment of truth values to propositional variables, with a corresponding assignment of truth values to all propositional formulas with those variables (obtained through the recursive application of truth-valued functions corresponding to the logical connectives making up those formulas).
  • (logic, first-order logic, model theory) A structure, and the corresponding assignment of a truth value to each sentence in the language for that structure.
  • (algebra) A measure of size or multiplicity.
  • (measure theory, domain theory) A map from the class of open sets of a topological space to the set of positive real numbers including infinity.
  • See also

    * (logic) interpretation