meal |
wheatmeal |
As nouns the difference between meal and wheatmeal
is that
meal is (
senseid)food that is prepared and eaten, usually at a specific time (eg breakfast = morning meal, lunch = noon meal, etc) or
meal can be the coarse-ground edible part of various grains often used to feed animals; flour or
meal can be a speck or spot while
wheatmeal is flour or meal derived from whole grains of wheat, often not finely ground.
As a verb meal
is to defile or taint.
grain |
wheatmeal |
As nouns the difference between grain and wheatmeal
is that
grain is hate, hatred, disgust while
wheatmeal is flour or meal derived from whole grains of wheat, often not finely ground.
ground |
wheatmeal |
As nouns the difference between ground and wheatmeal
is that
ground is (
senseid)(uncountable) the surface of the earth, as opposed to the sky or water or underground while
wheatmeal is flour or meal derived from whole grains of wheat, often not finely ground.
As a verb ground
is to connect (an electrical conductor or device) to a ground or
ground can be (
grind).
As an adjective ground
is crushed, or reduced to small particles.
quality |
equative |
As nouns the difference between quality and equative
is that
quality is level of excellence while
equative is a construction showing an equal quality. In English, this is normally formed using as. For example, the equative of
happy is
as happy as.
As adjectives the difference between quality and equative
is that
quality is being of good worth, well made, fit for purpose while
equative is of, pertaining to, or being an equative.
as |
equative |
As nouns the difference between as and equative
is that
as is a libra while
equative is a construction showing an equal quality. In English, this is normally formed using as. For example, the equative of
happy is
as happy as.
As an adverb as
is to such an extent or degree.
As a conjunction as
is in the same way that; according to what.
As a preposition as
is
Introducing a basis of comparison, with an object in the objective case.As an abbreviation AS
is anglo-Saxon.
As an adjective equative is
of, pertaining to, or being an equative.
case |
equative |
In grammar terms the difference between case and equative
is that
case is abstract feature of a noun phrase that determines its function in a sentence, such as a grammatical case and a position while
equative is a grammatical case in certain languages, including Ossetic and Sumerian, that indicates something is like something else. English equivalents include
he was the same age as her and
he looks like him.
As nouns the difference between case and equative
is that
case is an actual event, situation, or fact while
equative is a construction showing an equal quality. In English, this is normally formed using as. For example, the equative of
happy is
as happy as.
As adjectives the difference between case and equative
is that
case is the last remaining card of a particular rank while
equative is of, pertaining to, or being an equative.
As a verb case
is to propose hypothetical cases.
ossetic |
equative |
As adjectives the difference between ossetic and equative
is that
ossetic is while
equative is (grammar) of, pertaining to, or being an.
As a proper noun ossetic
is .
As a noun equative is
(grammar) a construction showing an equal quality in english, this is normally formed using as for example, the equative of
happy'' is ''as happy as .
sumerian |
equative |
As adjectives the difference between sumerian and equative
is that
sumerian is of, from or pertaining to sumer while
equative is (grammar) of, pertaining to, or being an.
As nouns the difference between sumerian and equative
is that
sumerian is a person of sumer while
equative is (grammar) a construction showing an equal quality in english, this is normally formed using as for example, the equative of
happy'' is ''as happy as .
As a proper noun sumerian
is the ancient language spoken in sumer, a language isolate.
afaik |
nafaik |
see also |
As initialisms the difference between afaik and nafaik
is that
afaik is as far as I know while
NAFAIK is not as far as I know.
illuminati |
illuminist |
As an adjective illuminati
is .
As a verb illuminati
is .
As a noun illuminist is
someone who subscribes to the doctrine of illuminism, or who claims to have achieved spiritual illumination; one of the illuminati.
Pages