Packet vs Sheaf - What's the difference?
packet | sheaf | Related terms |
A small pack or package; a little bundle or parcel; as, a packet of letters, a packet of crisps, a packet of biscuits.
(lb) Originally, a vessel employed by government to convey dispatches or mails; hence, a vessel employed in conveying dispatches, mails, passengers, and goods, and having fixed days of sailing; a mail boat. Packet boat, ship, vessel ().
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*:With just the turn of a shoulder she indicated the water front, where, at the end of the dock on which they stood, lay the good ship, Mount Vernon , river packet , the black smoke already pouring from her stacks.
(lb) A specimen envelope containing small, dried plants or containing parts of plants when attached to a larger sheet.
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*:With fresh material, taxonomic conclusions are leavened by recognition that the material examined reflects the site it occupied; a herbarium packet gives one only a small fraction of the data desirable for sound conclusions. Herbarium material does not, indeed, allow one to extrapolate safely: what you see is what you get.
(lb) A small fragment of data as transmitted on some types of network, notably Ethernet networks ().
(lb) A plastic bag.
*2012' August 6,
To make up into a packet or bundle.
To send in a packet or dispatch vessel.
* Ford
To ply with a packet or dispatch boat.
To subject to a denial-of-service attack in which a large number of data packets are sent.
* 2007 , Committee on Improving Cybersecurity Research in the United States, ?Toward a Safer and More Secure Cyberspace
A quantity of the stalks and ears of wheat, rye, or other grain, bound together; a bundle of grain or straw.
* 1593 , (William Shakespeare), Titus Andronicus , Act V, Scene III, line 70:
* (rfdate) (John Dryden):
Any collection of things bound together; a bundle.
A bundle of arrows sufficient to fill a quiver, or the allowance of each archer.
* (rfdate) (John Dryden):
A quantity of arrows, usually twenty-four.
* 1786 , Francis Grose, A Treatise on Ancient Armour and Weapons , page 34:
(mechanical) A sheave.
(mathematics) An abstract construct in topology that associates data to the open sets of a topological space, together with well-defined restrictions from larger to smaller open sets, subject to the condition that compatible data on overlapping open sets corresponds, via the restrictions, to a unique datum on the union of the open sets.
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To gather and bind into a sheaf; to make into sheaves; as, to sheaf wheat.
To collect and bind cut grain, or the like; to make sheaves.
* 1599 , William Shakespeare, As You Like It , Act III, Scene II, line 107:
In transitive terms the difference between packet and sheaf
is that packet is to send in a packet or dispatch vessel while sheaf is to gather and bind into a sheaf; to make into sheaves; as, to sheaf wheat.In intransitive terms the difference between packet and sheaf
is that packet is to ply with a packet or dispatch boat while sheaf is to collect and bind cut grain, or the like; to make sheaves.packet
English
Alternative forms
* pacquet (obsolete)Noun
(en noun)Wendy Knowler], ''[http://www.iol.co.za/blogs/wendy-knowler-s-consumer-watch-1.1608/plastic-packets-who-bags-the-profits-1.1356896 Plastic 'packets : who bags the profits?
Verb
(en verb)- Her husband was packeted to France.
- Typically, one hacker will annoy another; the offended party replies by launching a denial-of-service attack against the offender. These attacks—known as packeting —tend to be of limited duration
See also
* datagram * packetlike * packet radio * packet switching, packet-switchingReferences
* ----sheaf
English
Noun
(en-noun)- O, let me teach you how to knit again / This scattered corn into one mutual sheaf , / These broken limbs again into one body.
- The reaper fills his greedy hands, / And binds the golden sheaves in brittle bands.
- a sheaf of paper
- The sheaf of arrows shook and rattled in the case.
- Arrows were anciently made of reeds, afterwards of cornel wood, and occasionally of every species of wood: but according to Roger Ascham, ash was best; arrows were reckoned by sheaves', a ' sheaf consisted of twenty-four arrows.
Verb
(en verb)- They that reap must sheaf and bind; Then to cart with Rosalind.