Placeholder vs Blankshire - What's the difference?
placeholder | blankshire |
Something used or included temporarily or as a substitute for something that is not known or must remain generic; that which holds, denotes or reserves a place for something to come later.
* {{quote-news
, year=2013
, date=February 14
, author=Scott Tobias
, title=Film: Reviews: A Good Day To Die Hard
, work=The Onion AV Club
(chiefly, dated)
* 1878 , John Byrne Leicester Warren, Salvia Richmond
* 1999 , Mark Fletcher, Managing communication in local government (page 84)
As a noun placeholder
is something used or included temporarily or as a substitute for something that is not known or must remain generic; that which holds, denotes or reserves a place for something to come later.As a proper noun blankshire is
(chiefly|dated).placeholder
English
(wikipedia placeholder)Alternative forms
* place holderNoun
(en noun)- This is placeholder data, so you’ll want to include the real numbers as soon as you have them.
citation, page= , passage=“I’m on vacation,” Willis grumbles several times throughout A Good Day To Die Hard, in what counts as the film’s sole running joke, a lame placeholder until he arrives at the big “yippee-ki-yay” punchline. }}
Synonyms
* kadigan, kadigin, cadigan, * See , ,blankshire
English
Proper noun
(en proper noun)- "Dooced good fishing in Blankshire ," threw in Charlie Mayne.
- That might, however, turn into, 'A senior officer today said that Blankshire District Council spends too much time and money in training'.