Fatigue vs Syncope - What's the difference?
fatigue | syncope |
A weariness caused by exertion; exhaustion.
* {{quote-news
, year=2012
, date=December 29
, author=Paul Doyle
, title=Arsenal's Theo Walcott hits hat-trick in thrilling victory over Newcastle
, work=The Guardian
A menial task, especially in the military.
(engineering) A mechanism of material failure involving of crack growth caused by low-stress cyclic loading.
* 2013 , N. Dowling, Mechanical Behaviour of Materials , page 399
to tire or make weary by physical or mental exertion
to lose so much strength or energy that one becomes tired, weary, feeble or exhausted
(intransitive, engineering, of a material specimen) to undergo the process of fatigue; to fail as a result of fatigue.
A loss of consciousness when someone faints, a swoon.
* 1973 Patrick O'Brian, HMS Surprise
(prosody, phonology) The absence of a sound from the interior of a word, for example by changing cannot to can't or the pronunciation of placenames in -cester (e.g. Leicester) as -ster.
A missed beat or off-beat stress in music resulting in syncopation.
As verbs the difference between fatigue and syncope
is that fatigue is while syncope is .As an adjective fatigue
is tired.fatigue
English
Noun
(en noun)citation, page= , passage=Alan Pardew finished by far the most frustrated man at the Emirates, blaming fatigue for the fact that Arsenal were able to kill his team off in the dying minutes.}}
- Mechanical failures due to fatigue have been the subject of engineering efforts for more than 150 years.
Synonyms
*Derived terms
* fatigues (military work clothing)Verb
(fatigu)External links
* * ----syncope
English
(wikipedia syncope)Noun
(en noun)- the rapidly-whitening face, the miserable fixed smile, meant a syncope within the next few bars.