Act vs Wildcard - What's the difference?
act | wildcard |
A certain standardized college admissions test in the United States, originally called the (term).
*
(computing) A character that takes the place of any other character or string that is not known or specified.
(also written wild card) An uncontrolled or unpredictable element.
* 2008 February 8, Eli Kintisch, "From Gasoline Alleys to Electric Avenues" [http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/319/5864/750a], Science 319(5864), page 751,
(also written wild card) An element, often deliberately concealed, which is withheld for contingency.
(sports, card games)
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=June 28
, author=Piers Newbery
, title=Wimbledon 2011: Sabine Lisicki beats Marion Bartoli
, work=BBC Sport
As nouns the difference between act and wildcard
is that act is (countable) something done, a deed while wildcard is (computing) a character that takes the place of any other character or string that is not known or specified.As a verb act
is to do something.act
English
Noun
(en noun)Coordinate terms
* (American College Test) SAT , GMAT , MCAT , DATAnagrams
* * * * English three-letter wordswildcard
English
Noun
(Wildcard character) (en noun)- In searching, if ''a*m'' finds ''amalgam'', ''atom'' and ''alum'', then * is acting as a wildcard .
- There are several technical wildcards , such as how the larger battery packs--four times larger than those of the Prius--will withstand the rigors of city driving,
citation, page= , passage=German wildcard Sabine Lisicki conquered her nerves to defeat France's Marion Bartoli and take her amazing Wimbledon run into the semi-finals.}}