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Quotidian vs Tantamount - What's the difference?

quotidian | tantamount |

As adjectives the difference between quotidian and tantamount

is that quotidian is (medicine) recurring every twenty-four hours or (more generally) daily (of symptoms etc) while tantamount is equivalent in meaning or effect.

As nouns the difference between quotidian and tantamount

is that quotidian is while tantamount is (obsolete) something which has the same value or amount (as something else).

As a verb tantamount is

(obsolete) to amount to as much; to be equivalent.

quotidian

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • (medicine) Recurring every twenty-four hours or (more generally) daily (of symptoms etc.).
  • * 1898 , Patrick Manson, Tropical Diseases , p. 104:
  • Quotidian periodicity we find in greater or less degree in nearly all fevers, particularly in fevers associated with suppuration.
  • * 1941 , American Journal of Tropical Medicine , vol. XXI:
  • I regret that the effect of these statements is a denial of the observation of initial quotidian paroxysms following artificial inoculation.
  • Happening every day; daily.
  • * 2000 , Marcel Berline, The Guardian , 10 Jul 2000:
  • I know that the government's daily idea to solve the country's law and order problem is not meant to be taken too seriously, but every now and again I am moved to raise an eyebrow at the quotidian suggestion.
  • Having the characteristics of something which can be seen, experienced etc. every day or very commonly; commonplace, ordinary; trivial, mundane.
  • * 2002 , Russ McDonald, in McEachern (Ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Shakespearean Tragedy , p. 28:
  • Tragedy demanded verse, not the quotidian prose of comedy, and verse usually supplied some form of end rhyme.
  • * 2010 , Steven Heller & Eddie S Glaude, Becoming a Graphic Designer :
  • Grids are used for such quotidian items as stationery, business cards, mailing labels, hang tags, instruction manuals, etc.

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • * 1623 , William Shakespeare, As You Like It :
  • If I could meet that Fancie-monger, I would giue him some good counsel, for he seemes to haue the Quotidian of Loue vpon him.
  • * 1671 , Robnert Boyle, Usefulness of Experimental Natural Philosophy , Part II:
  • I myself was, about two years since, strangely cured of a violent quotidian , which all the wonted method of physick had not so much abated, by applying to my wrists a mixture of two handfuls of bay-salt, two handfuls of the freshest English hops, and a quarter of a pound of blue currants [...].
  • (Anglicanism, historical) A daily allowance formerly paid to certain members of the clergy.
  • (usually with definite article) Commonplace or mundane things regarded as a class.
  • * 2005 , Lucy Mangan, The Guardian , 21 Sep 2005:
  • More than opposable thumbs and the invention of the flinthead axe, it was our ability to transcend the quotidian by weaving tales of awe and wonder that set us apart from the beasts.

    tantamount

    English

    Verb

    (en verb)
  • (obsolete) To amount to as much; to be equivalent.
  • (Jeremy Taylor)

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (obsolete) Something which has the same value or amount (as something else).
  • * 1977 , the Last Essays of Maurice Hewlett , page 42:
  • For end thereof, not despondency but madness : for when Cossey understood that Hobday had called his wife a tantamount , he waited for him outside, and gave him what he called a pair of clippers over the ear.

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • Equivalent in meaning or effect.
  • It's tantamount to fraud.
    In this view, disagreement and treason are tantamount .
  • * De Quincey
  • the certainty that delay, under these circumstances, was tantamount to ruin
  • * 1981 , Del Martin, Battered Wives (page 90)
  • expecting the woman to take her attacker into physical custody is tantamount to preventing the arrest. If she could handle him, she probably would not need to call the police in the first place.

    Usage notes

    Tantamount is used almost exclusively in the phrase tantamount to , but may also be used by itself.

    Quotations

    * 2003': In Bosnia, as in Rwanda, however, passive neutrality was '''tantamount to complicity with the perpetrators of "ethnic cleansing" and mass murder — ''The New Yorker, 3 March 2003