Mundane vs Cipher - What's the difference?
mundane | cipher |
worldly, earthly, profane, vulgar as opposed to heavenly
Pertaining to the Universe, cosmos or physical reality, as opposed to the spiritual world.
* 1662 Thomas Salusbury, Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems (Dialogue 2):
ordinary; not new
tedious; repetitive and boring
An unremarkable, ordinary human being.
(slang, derogatory, in various subcultures) A person considered to be "normal", part of the mainstream culture, outside the subculture, not part of the elite group.
* {{quote-magazine
, year = 1959
, date = December 1
, first = Ron
, last = Bennett
, authorlink =
, magazine = Skyrack
, title =
, url = http://www.gostak.co.uk/skyrack/SKYRACK10.htm
, volume =
, issue = 10
, page =
, passage = THE LIVERPOOL PARTY at Pat and Frank Milnes’ celebrated both the Gunpowder Plot and the Liverpool Club’s 400th and something meeting. Two mundane and non-fan friends of the hosts - women, too - played brag all night and Norman Weedall disappeared at 3 a.m.
}}
* {{quote-magazine
, year = 1989
, date = Spring
, first = Lawrence
, last = Person
, authorlink =
, magazine =
, title = Fear and Loathing in New Orleans: A Savage Journey Into the Heart of American Fandom
, url =
, volume = 2
, issue = 3 (whole number 7)
, page = 10
, passage = The Demon Barber and I played Shock the Mundanes . The door would open up and we would start a sentence in mid-imaginary conversation, like—‘Of course, they never found the body.’
}}
* 1996 , "Angel of Death", furries vs. mundanes'' (discussion on Internet newsgroup ''alt.fan.furry )
(fandom slang) The world outside fandom; the normal, mainstream world.
* {{quote-magazine
, year = 1966
, date = November
, first = Lee
, last = Hoffman
, authorlink =
, magazine = Science-Fiction Five-Yearly
, title = Our Authors
, url = http://fanac.org/fanzines/SF_Five_Yearly/sffy4-34.html
, volume =
, issue = 4
, page = 35
, passage = Long famed in fandom, Mr. Bloch skyrocketed to prominence in the mundane when his autobiographical novel, PSYCHO, was made into a hit motion picture.
}}
A numeric character.
Any text character.
* Sir Walter Raleigh
A combination or interweaving of letters, as the initials of a name; a device; a monogram.
A method of transforming a text in order to conceal its meaning.
* Bishop Burnet
(cryptography) A cryptographic system using an algorithm that converts letters]] or sequences of [[bit, bits into ciphertext.
Ciphertext; a message concealed via a cipher .
A grouping of three digits in a number, especially when delimited by commas or periods:
A design of interlacing initials: a decorative design consisting of a set of interlaced initials.
(music) A fault in an organ valve which causes a pipe to sound continuously without the key having been pressed.
A hip-hop jam session [http://www.rapdict.org/Cipher]
The path (usually circular) shared cannabis takes through a group, an occasion of cannabis smoking.
Someone or something of no importance.
* Washington Irving
(obsolete) Zero.
(regional, dated) To calculate.
* 1843 , (Thomas Carlyle), '', book 2, ch. IX, ''Abbot Samson
As nouns the difference between mundane and cipher
is that mundane is an unremarkable, ordinary human being while cipher is a numeric character.As an adjective mundane
is worldly, earthly, profane, vulgar as opposed to heavenly.As a verb cipher is
(regional|dated) to calculate.mundane
English
Adjective
(er)- Amongst mundane bodies, six there are that do perpetually move, and they are the six Planets; of the rest, that is, of the Earth, Sun, and fixed Stars, it is disputable which of them moveth, and which stands still.
Synonyms
* (of the earth) worldly * banal, boring, commonplace, everyday, routine, workaday, jejuneAntonyms
* heavenly * arcaneReferences
*Noun
(en noun)- Some people just think your (SIC) a sicko or something for enjoying the art. I know that alot (SIC) of the time, I would rather see some nice nude furrygirls instead of pictures of nude mundanes .
Synonyms
* (ordinary person) See * (mainstream person) SeeDerived terms
* mundanely * mundaneness * mundanitySee also
* (pedialite) Article on the use of “mundane” as a derogatory term.Anagrams
* ----cipher
English
Alternative forms
* cypher, less common than cipher but still in use in English. see The Ultra Secret by 's series of Cyphers (Nr 1, Nr 2, Nr 3, ...) before and into WWII.Noun
(en noun)- This wisdom began to be written in ciphers and characters and letters bearing the forms of creatures.
- a painter's cipher''', an engraver's '''cipher , etc.
- The message was written in a simple cipher . Anyone could figure it out.
- His father engaged him when he was very young to write all his letters to England in cipher .
- The message is clearly a cipher , but I can't figure it out.
- The probability is 1 in 1,000,000,000,000,000 — a number having five ciphers of zeros.
- Here he was a mere cipher .
Synonyms
* (numeric character) number, numeral * (method for concealing the meaning of text) code * (cryptographic system using an algorithm) * (ciphertext) * * (design of interlacing initials) monogram * (fault in an organ valve causing a pipe to sound continuously) * (hip-hop jam session) * (path that shared cannabis takes through a group) * (someone or something of no importance) (person): nobody, nonentity; (thing) nonentity, nothing, nullity * naught/nought, nothing, oh, zeroDerived terms
* ciphertext * cypherpunk * cypherparty * decipher * encipherCitations
Verb
(en verb)- I never learned much more than how to read and cipher .
- For the mischief that one blockhead, that every blockhead does, in a world so feracious, teeming with endless results as ours, no ciphering will sum up.
