Posture vs Equilibrium - What's the difference?
posture | equilibrium |
The way a person holds and positions their body.
* 1609, William Shakespeare, Coriolanus
* 1689 (or earlier), Aphra Behn, Love-Letters Between a Nobleman and His Sister
* 1895, Oscar Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest
A situation or condition.
* 1905, David Graham Phillips, The Deluge
* 1910, H.G. Wells, The History of Mr Polly
One's attitude or the social or political position one takes towards an issue or another person.
* 1651, Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan
* 1912, G.K. Chesterton, A Miscellany of Men
(rare) The position of someone or something relative to another; position; situation.
* 1661, Thomas Salusbury (translator), Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief Systems of the World
to put one's body into a posture or series of postures, especially hoping that one will be noticed and admired
to pretend to have an opinion or a conviction
To place in a particular position or attitude; to pose.
The condition of a system in which competing influences are balanced, resulting in no net change.
* 1999 , , Agent smith speech
(physics) The state of a body at rest or in uniform motion in which the resultant of all forces on it is zero.
(chemistry) The state of a reaction in which the rates of the forward and reverse reactions are the same.
Mental balance.
English nouns with irregular plurals
As nouns the difference between posture and equilibrium
is that posture is the way a person holds and positions their body while equilibrium is balance, equilibrium.As a verb posture
is to put one's body into a posture or series of postures, especially hoping that one will be noticed and admired.posture
English
Noun
(en noun)- As if that whatsoever god who leads him / Were slily crept into his human powers, / And gave him graceful posture .
- ...walking in a most dejected posture , without a band, unbraced, his arms a-cross his open breast, and his eyes bent to the floor;
- Rise, sir, from this semi-recumbent posture . It is most indecorous.
- Even as I was reading these fables of my millions, there lay on the desk before me a statement of the exact posture of my affairs...
- Uncle Jim stopped amazed. His brain did not instantly rise to the new posture of things.
- ...that is, their Forts, Garrisons, and Guns upon the Frontiers of their Kingdomes; and continuall Spyes upon their neighbours; which is a posture of War.
- But it is not true, no sane person can call it true, that man as a whole in his general attitude towards the world, in his posture towards death or green fields, towards the weather or the baby, will be wise to cultivate dissatisfaction.
- The Moon beheld in any posture , in respect of the Sun and us, sheweth us its superficies ... always equally clear.
Verb
(postur)- If you're finished posturing in front of the mirror, can I use the bathroom now?
- The politicians couldn't really care less about the issue: they're just posturing for the media.
- to posture''' oneself; to '''posture a model
- (Howell)
Anagrams
* ----equilibrium
English
Alternative forms
* “equilibrium]” listed in the Oxford English Dictionary [2nd Ed.(dated)
Noun
(en-noun)- Every mammal on this planet instinctively develops a natural equilibrium with the surrounding environment but you humans do not. You move to an area and you multiply and multiply until every natural resource is consumed and the only way you can survive is to spread to another area. There is another organism on this planet that follows the same pattern. Do you know what it is? A virus.