Quiescent vs Abeyance - What's the difference?
quiescent | abeyance |
Inactive, at rest, quiet.
* Professor Wilson
(grammar) Not sounded; silent.
(legal) Expectancy; condition of ownership of real property being undetermined; lapse in succession of ownership of estate, or title.
Suspension; temporary suppression; dormant condition.
* 2003 , (Bill Bryson), A Short History of Nearly Everything , BCA 2003, page 376:
(heraldry) Expectancy of a title, its right in existence but its exercise suspended.
As an adjective quiescent
is inactive, at rest, quiet.As a noun abeyance is
(legal) expectancy; condition of ownership of real property being undetermined; lapse in succession of ownership of estate, or title .quiescent
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- The bats were quiescent at that time of day, so we slowly entered the cave.
- In times of national security, the feeling of patriotism is so quiescent that it seems hardly to exist.
- The k is quiescent in "knight" and "know".
Synonyms
* still * tranquilDerived terms
* quiescence * quiescentlySee also
* acquiescent * quiesce ----abeyance
English
Noun
(en noun)- The proceeds of the estate shall be held in abeyance in an escrow account until the minor reaches age twenty-one.
- When there is no person in existence in whom an inheritance (or a dignity) can vest, it is said to be in abeyance . -Blackstone
- Without a plausible explanation for what might have provoked an ice age, the whole theory fell into abeyance .
- The broad pennant of a commodore first class has been in abeyance since 1958, together with the rank.