exercise |
tool |
As nouns the difference between exercise and tool
is that
exercise is any activity designed to develop or hone a skill or ability while
tool is (
senseid)a mechanical device intended to make a task easier.
As verbs the difference between exercise and tool
is that
exercise is to exert for the sake of training or improvement; to practice in order to develop while
tool is to work on or shape with tools, eg,
hand-tooled leather .
six |
shiksa |
As nouns the difference between six and shiksa
is that
six is pike while
shiksa is (judaism|derogatory) a non-jewish girl, especially one who is attractive and young.
reasons |
benefits |
As nouns the difference between reasons and benefits
is that
reasons is plural of lang=en while
benefits is plural of lang=en.
As verbs the difference between reasons and benefits
is that
reasons is third-person singular of reason while
benefits is third-person singular of benefit.
mandate |
scope |
As nouns the difference between mandate and scope
is that
mandate is an official or authoritative command; an order or injunction; a commission; a judicial precept while
scope is the breadth, depth or reach of a subject; a domain.
As verbs the difference between mandate and scope
is that
mandate is to authorize while
scope is to perform a cursory investigation, as
to scope out.
applicative |
functional |
As adjectives the difference between applicative and functional
is that
applicative is having practical application; applicable while
functional is in good working order.
As a noun functional is
(mathematics) a function that takes a function as its argument; more precisely: a function
y''=''f''(''x'') whose argument ''x varies in a space of (real valued, complex valued) functions and whose value belongs to a monodimensional space an example: the definite integration of integrable real functions in a real interval.
skylar |
damian |
As a noun skylar
is (
skyl).
As a proper noun damian is
, cognate to english damian.
comparative |
constructive |
As adjectives the difference between comparative and constructive
is that
comparative is of or relating to comparison while
constructive is relating to or causing construction.
As a noun comparative
is a construction showing a relative quality, in English usually formed by adding
more or appending
-er. For example, the comparative of
green is
greener; of
evil,
more evil.
coincide |
superimpose |
As verbs the difference between coincide and superimpose
is that
coincide is to occupy exactly the same space while
superimpose is to place an object over another object, usually in such a way that both will be visible.
apprehensively |
derision |
As an adverb apprehensively
is in an apprehensive manner; with apprehension.
As a noun derision is
derision.
directorate |
office |
As nouns the difference between directorate and office
is that
directorate is an agency headed by a director, usually a subdivision of a major government department while
office is a building or room where clerical or professional duties are performed.
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