Syndicate vs Commune - What's the difference?
syndicate | commune |
A group of individuals or companies formed to transact some specific business, or to promote a common interest; a self-coordinating group.
A similar group of gangsters engaged in organized crime.
A chain of newspapers, or an agency that distributes features to multiple newspapers.
The office or jurisdiction of a syndic; a council or body of syndics.
To become a syndicate.
To put under the control of a group acting as a unit.
To release media content through a syndicate to be published or broadcast through multiple outlets.
A small community, often rural, whose members share in the ownership of property, and in the division of labour; the members of such a community.
A local political division in many European countries.
(obsolete) The commonalty; the common people.
(obsolete) communion; sympathetic intercourse or conversation between friends
* Tennyson
To converse together with sympathy and confidence; to interchange sentiments or feelings; to take counsel.
* Shakespeare
To communicate (with) spiritually; to be together (with); to contemplate or absorb.
To receive the communion.
* Bishop Burnet
As nouns the difference between syndicate and commune
is that syndicate is a group of individuals or companies formed to transact some specific business, or to promote a common interest; a self-coordinating group while commune is a small community, often rural, whose members share in the ownership of property, and in the division of labour; the members of such a community.As verbs the difference between syndicate and commune
is that syndicate is to become a syndicate while commune is to converse together with sympathy and confidence; to interchange sentiments or feelings; to take counsel.syndicate
English
Noun
(wikipedia syndicate) (en noun)- (Bishop Burnet)
Synonyms
* (roughly) — business partnersVerb
(syndicat)Anagrams
*commune
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) commune, in turn deriving from Latin.Noun
(wikipedia commune) (en noun)- (Chaucer)
- For days of happy commune dead.
Etymology 2
From (etyl) .Verb
(commun)- I would commune with you of such things / That want no ear but yours.
- He spent a week in the backcountry, communing with nature.
- To commune under both kinds.
