pascal |
atm |
As a noun pascal
is in the International System of Units, the derived unit of pressure and stress; one newton per square metre. Symbol:
Pa.
As a proper noun Pascal
is a given name derived from Latin used in medieval England; today occasionally borrowed from French.
As an initialism ATM is
initialism of lang=en or initialism of nocap=1|lang=en.
As an adverb ATM is
initialism of lang=en.
As an abbreviation atm is
atmosphere (as a unit of pressure.
pascal |
par |
As a proper noun pascal
is used in medieval england; today occasionally borrowed from french.
As a noun par is
pair, couple.
pascal |
href |
pascal |
|
raymond |
pascal |
As proper nouns the difference between raymond and pascal
is that
raymond is a given name derived from Germanic while
Pascal is a given name derived from Latin used in medieval England; today occasionally borrowed from French.
As a noun pascal is
in the International System of Units, the derived unit of pressure and stress; one newton per square metre. Symbol:
Pa.
valuedifferencebetweennewton |
pascal |
As a proper noun pascal is
used in medieval england; today occasionally borrowed from french.
pascal |
torrampflash |
pascal |
nascal |
As a proper noun pascal
is used in medieval england; today occasionally borrowed from french.
As a noun nascal is
(medicine|obsolete) a kind of pessary of medicated wool or cotton.
pascal |
paschal |
As a noun pascal
is in the International System of Units, the derived unit of pressure and stress; one newton per square metre. Symbol:
Pa.
As a proper noun Pascal
is a given name derived from Latin used in medieval England; today occasionally borrowed from French.
As an adjective paschal is
of or relating to Passover.
pascal |
rascal |
As nouns the difference between pascal and rascal
is that
pascal is in the International System of Units, the derived unit of pressure and stress; one newton per square metre. Symbol:
Pa while
rascal is a dishonest person; a rogue; a scoundrel; a trickster.
As proper nouns the difference between pascal and rascal
is that
pascal is a given name derived from Latin used in medieval England; today occasionally borrowed from French while
Rascal is {{surname|lang=en}.
As an adjective rascal is
low; lowly, part of or belonging to the common rabble.
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