Insulate vs Intension - What's the difference?
insulate | intension |
To separate, detach, or isolate.
To separate a body or material from others, e.g. by non-conductors to prevent the transfer of electricity, heat, etc.
intensity or the act of becoming intense .
* Francis Bacon
(logic, semantics) Any property or quality connoted by a word, phrase or other symbol, contrasted to actual instances in the real world to which the term applies.
* Sir W. Hamilton
(dated) A straining, stretching, or bending; the state of being strained.
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As a verb insulate
is to separate, detach, or isolate.As a noun intension is
intensity or the act of becoming intense .insulate
English
Verb
- Ceramic can be used to insulate power lines.
Synonyms
* isolateExternal links
* * ----intension
English
(wikipedia intension)Noun
(en noun)- Sounds likewise do rise and fall with the intension or remission of the wind.
- This law is, that the intension of our knowledge is in the inverse ratio of its extension.
- the intension of a musical string