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dense

Dense vs Wet - What's the difference?

dense | wet |


As adjectives the difference between dense and wet

is that dense is having relatively high density while wet is of an object, etc, covered with or impregnated with liquid.

As a noun wet is

liquid or moisture.

As a verb wet is

to cover or impregnate with liquid.

Dense vs Dense - What's the difference?

dense | dense |


In mathematics|topology|lang=en terms the difference between dense and dense

is that dense is (mathematics|topology) being a subset of a topological space that approximates the space well see wikipedia article on (dense set)s for mathematical definition while dense is (mathematics|topology) being a subset of a topological space that approximates the space well see wikipedia article on (dense set)s for mathematical definition.

As adjectives the difference between dense and dense

is that dense is having relatively high density while dense is having relatively high density.

Condensed vs Dense - What's the difference?

condensed | dense |


As adjectives the difference between condensed and dense

is that condensed is the state of having been condensed; highly concentrated while dense is having relatively high density.

As a verb condensed

is past tense of condense.

Dense vs Airhead - What's the difference?

dense | airhead |


As an adjective dense

is having relatively high density.

As a noun airhead is

a silly, foolish or unintelligent person.

Dents vs Dense - What's the difference?

dents | dense |


As a noun dents

is .

As a verb dents

is (dent).

As an adjective dense is

having relatively high density.

Dense vs Daft - What's the difference?

dense | daft |


As adjectives the difference between dense and daft

is that dense is having relatively high density while daft is insane, mad.

Dense vs Profound - What's the difference?

dense | profound |


As adjectives the difference between dense and profound

is that dense is having relatively high density while profound is descending far below the surface; opening or reaching to great depth; deep.

As a noun profound is

(obsolete) the deep; the sea; the ocean.

As a verb profound is

(obsolete) to cause to sink deeply; to cause to dive or penetrate far down.

Since vs Dense - What's the difference?

since | dense |


As an adverb since

is from a specified time in the past.

As a preposition since

is from (time).

As a conjunction since

is from the time that.

As an adjective dense is

having relatively high density.

Dense vs Congest - What's the difference?

dense | congest |


As an adjective dense

is having relatively high density.

As a noun congest is

(Ireland, Scotland) a tenant living on land whose resources do not support him adequately.

As a verb congest is

to overfill or overcrowd.

Dense vs Long - What's the difference?

dense | long |


As adjectives the difference between dense and long

is that dense is having relatively high density while long is having much distance from one terminating point on an object or an area to another terminating point usually applies to horizontal dimensions; see Usage Notes below.

As an adverb long is

over a great distance in space.

As a noun long is

a long vowel.

As a verb long is

to take a long position in.

As a proper noun Long is

{{surname|from=nicknames}} Originally a nickname for a tall man.

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