Target vs Threshold - What's the difference?
target | threshold |
A butt or mark to shoot at, as for practice, or to test the accuracy of a firearm, or the force of a projectile.
A goal or objective.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-06-22, volume=407, issue=8841, page=70, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= A kind of small shield or buckler, used as a defensive weapon in war.
* 1598 , William Shakespeare, Henry IV , Part I, Act II, Scene IV, line 200,
(obsolete) A shield resembling the Roman scutum. In modern usage, a smaller variety of shield is usually implied by this term.
* 1786 , Francis Grose, A Treatise on Ancient Armour and Weapons , page 22,
(sports) The pattern or arrangement of a series of hits made by a marksman on a butt or mark.
(surveying) The sliding crosspiece, or vane, on a leveling staff.
(rail transport) A conspicuous disk attached to a switch lever to show its position, or for use as a signal.
(cricket) the number of runs that the side batting last needs to score in the final innings in order to win
(linguistics) The tenor of a metaphor.
(translation studies) The translated version of a document, or the language into which translation occurs.
A person (or group of people) that a person or organization is trying to employ or to have as a customer, audience etc.
* {{quote-news, year=2011, date=September 2, author=Phil McNulty, work=BBC
, title= To aim something, especially a weapon, at (a target).
(figuratively) To aim for as an audience or demographic.
(computing) To produce code suitable for.
The bottom-most part of a doorway that one crosses to enter; a sill.
(by extension) An entrance
The start of the landing area of a runway
(engineering) The quantitative point at which an action is triggered, especially a lower limit.
The wage or salary at which income tax becomes due
The outset of an action or project
The point where one mentally or physically is vulnerable in response to provocation or to particular things in general. As in emotions, stress, or pain.
The point of beginning or entry
As nouns the difference between target and threshold
is that target is a butt or mark to shoot at, as for practice, or to test the accuracy of a firearm, or the force of a projectile while threshold is the bottom-most part of a doorway that one crosses to enter; a sill.As a verb target
is to aim something, especially a weapon, at (a target).target
English
(wikipedia target)Noun
(en noun)Engineers of a different kind, passage=Private-equity nabobs bristle at being dubbed mere financiers.
- These four came all afront, and mainly thrust at me. I made me no more ado but took all their seven points in my target , thus.
- The target or buckler was carried by the heavy armed foot, it answered to the scutum of the Romans; its form was sometimes that of a rectangular parallelogram, but more commonly had its bottom rounded off; it was generally convex, being curved in its breadth.
Bulgaria 0-3 England, passage=Gary Cahill, a target for Arsenal and Tottenham before the transfer window closed, put England ahead early on and Rooney was on target twice before the interval as the early hostility of the Bulgarian supporters was swiftly subdued.}}
Derived terms
* targeter * targetingSynonyms
* See also * (translated version) target languageCoordinate terms
* (translated version) sourceVerb
- The advertising campaign targeted older women.
- This cross-platform compiler can target any of several processors.
See also
*threshold
English
(wikipedia threshold)Noun
(en noun)- From all the pressure my partner has been through lately, his emotion threshold has suddenly gotten pretty low these days. I can tell because he easily loses it when he is around people or hears about anything to do with his concerns.
