Trit vs Tuit - What's the difference?
trit | tuit |
(computing) The ternary equivalent of a bit; a fundamental unit of information that may take any of three distinct states.
(humorous)
* 1996' October 6, Colin Douthwaite <cfbd@southern.co.nz>, "'''Tuit ", message-ID <538pjq$nn1@orm.southern.co.nz>, ''rec.humor , Usenet [http://google.com/group/rec.humor/msg/acb923e94a1dc471]:
* 2000' December 7, Joe Zeff <the.guy.with.the.sideburns@lasfs.org>, "'''Tuit Update", message-ID <3a2ed57b.471201@news.earthlink.net>, ''alt.sysadmin.recovery , Usenet [http://google.com/group/alt.sysadmin.recovery/msg/bf943259ce3422cd]:
* '2002 Mat 25, Scott W. Harvey <fromrarp@scottharvey.com>, "1953 BEITMAN MANUAL NOW AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD", message-ID <3cf2b4de.159435990@enews.newsguy.com>, ''rec.antiques.radio+phono , Usenet [http://google.com/group/rec.antiques.radio+phono/msg/de81689394ef1ed2]:
*:1926-38 and 1939 manuals will be re-posted when my TUIT is round enough.
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As nouns the difference between trit and tuit
is that trit is the ternary equivalent of a bit; a fundamental unit of information that may take any of three distinct states while tuit is synonym of lang=en.trit
English
Noun
(en noun)Derived terms
* qutrittuit
English
Noun
(en noun)- THIS IS A TUIT
- My tuit is back from the shop, in a properly round state.