Neighbour vs Ultralocal - What's the difference?
neighbour | ultralocal |
(en noun) (British spelling)
A person living on adjacent or nearby land; a person situated adjacently or nearby; anything (of the same type of thing as the subject) in an adjacent or nearby position.
* 1660 , , The Tales and Jests of Mr. Hugh Peters , reprinted 1807,
* 1913 , , 2010,
* 1973 , , Nova Scotia: Window on the Sea ,
* 2009 , D. Staufer, Classical Percolation'', Asok K. Sen, Kamal K. Bardhan, Bikas K. Chakrabarti (editors), ''Quantum and Semi-Classical Percolation and Breakdown in Disordered Solids , Springer, Lecture Notes in Physics 762,
* 2011', Richard Jensen, Chris Cornelis, ''Fuzzy-Rough Nearest '''Neighbour Classification'', James F. Peters, Andrzej Skowron (editors-in-chief), ''Transactions on Rough Sets XIII , Springer, Lecture Notes in Computing Science 6499,
One who is near in sympathy or confidence.
* Shakespeare
(biblical) any fellow human being
* You shall not take vengeance, nor bear any grudge against the children of your people, but you shall love your neighbor as yourself: I am the Lord. —Leviticus 19:18 (NKJV)
To be adjacent to (more often used as neighbouring)
* Sandys
To approach; to verge on.
To associate intimately with.
(mathematics, physics) Whose properties are influenced by its immediate neighbours only
As a noun neighbour
is a person living on adjacent or nearby land; a person situated adjacently or nearby; anything (of the same type of thing as the subject) in an adjacent or nearby position.As a verb neighbour
is to be adjacent to (more often used as neighbouring).As an adjective ultralocal is
(mathematics|physics) whose properties are influenced by its immediate neighbours only.neighbour
English
Alternative forms
* (US) neighbor * (archaic) neyghbour * (obsolete) naybor, naybour, neibor, neibour, neighbore, neighboure, neyghbor, neyghbore, neyghboureNoun
- My neighbour has an annoying cat.
- They?re our neighbours across the street.
- My neighbour is very irritable and grumpy at times.
page 10,
- Being at his own house in the country, when a great tempest of wind rose, he takes an occasion to visit a neighbour' by him, and being somewhat merily disposed, quoth he Oh ' neighbour , did you not see what a wind there was the other day?
unnumbered page,
- Undine at length shrank back with an unrecognizing face; but her movement made her opera-glass slip to the floor, and her neighbour bent down and picked it up.
page 126,
- Neighbours' enact their substantive noun when there?s a ' neighbour?s sickness in the night; as friends do theirs, the cindered and the green times through.
page 4,
- Then a cluster is grown by letting each empty neighbour' of an already occupied cluster site decide once and for all, whether it is occupied or empty. One needs to keep and to update a perimeter list of empty ' neighbours .
page 56,
- By contrast to the latter, our method uses the nearest neighbours to construct lower and upper approximations of decision classes, and classifies test instances based on their membership to these approximations.
- Buckingham / No more shall be the neighbour to my counsel.
Synonyms
* (l) * (christian sense) fellow, fellow manAntonyms
* (biblical) stranger, foreignerDerived terms
* good fences make good neighbours * love for one's neighbour * neighbourhood (pos n) * neighbouring (pos n) * neighbourly (pos a) * neighbourliness (pos n)Verb
(en-verb) (British spelling)- Though France neighbours Germany, its culture is significantly different.
- leisurely ascending hills that neighbour the shore
- That sort of talk is neighbouring on treason.
- (Shakespeare)