Recital vs Rumor - What's the difference?
recital | rumor | Related terms |
The act of reciting (the repetition of something that has been memorized); rehearsal
The act of telling the order of events of something in detail the order of events; narration.
That which is recited; a story, narration, account.
A vocal, instrumental or visual performance by a soloist.
(legal) A formal, preliminary statement in a deed or writing in order to explain the reasons on which the transaction is founded, prior to a positive allegation.
(US, countable) A statement or claim of questionable accuracy, from no known reliable source, usually spread by word of mouth.
(US, uncountable) Information or misinformation of the kind contained in such claims.
(transitive, usually, used in the passive voice) To tell a rumor about; to gossip.
Recital is a related term of rumor.
As nouns the difference between recital and rumor
is that recital is recital while rumor is (us|countable) a statement or claim of questionable accuracy, from no known reliable source, usually spread by word of mouth.As a verb rumor is
(transitive|usually|used in the passive voice) to tell a rumor about; to gossip.recital
English
Noun
(en noun)Anagrams
* ----rumor
English
Alternative forms
* rumour (UK, Commonwealth, International)Noun
- There's a rumor going round that he's going to get married.
- They say he used to be a thief, but that's just rumor .
Synonyms
* (piece of information) * (information) gossip, hearsay, talk, tittle-tattleDerived terms
* rumor campaign * rumor has itHypernyms
* informationVerb
(en verb)- John is rumored to be next in line for a promotion.