different between association vs chapel

association

English

Etymology

From Latin associ?ti?, from associ? (perhaps via French association).Morphologically associate +? -ion

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /??s???i?e???n/, /??s??si?e???n/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /??so??i?e???n/, /??so?si?e???n/
  • Rhymes: -e???n

Noun

association (countable and uncountable, plural associations)

  1. The act of associating.
  2. The state of being associated; a connection to or an affiliation with something.
  3. (statistics) Any relationship between two measured quantities that renders them statistically dependent (but not necessarily causal or a correlation).
  4. A group of persons associated for a common purpose; an organization; society.
  5. (object-oriented programming) Relationship between classes of objects that allows one object instance to cause another to perform an action on its behalf.

Synonyms

  • (state of being associated): connection; See also Thesaurus:relation
  • ass'n (abbreviation)

Derived terms

  • guilt by association

Related terms

Translations

See also

  • alliance
  • coalition
  • league
  • union

Danish

Noun

association c (singular definite associationen, plural indefinite associationer)

  1. association
    • 2007, Drømmenes dimensioner, Gyldendal A/S (?ISBN), page 83
      Børn blokerer desuden ofte for associationer af angst for drømmeindholdet.
      Furthermore, children often block associations of anxiety for the dream content.
    • 2014, Klaus Kjøller, Sprogets Vej til Sindets Fred, 2. rev. vej, nu med Dit og Dat, KJOELLER.dk (?ISBN)
      I stedet for det dagligsproglige 'tilintetgørelse', som kan rumme negative associationer af ødelæggelse og brutalitet, benytter vi på Sprogets Vej det pluskorrigerede udtryk 'ophævelse'.
      Instead of the everyday word "annihilation", which may contain negative associations of destruction and brutality, we use, on the Way of Language, the plus-corrected [?] expression "cancellation".
    • 2002, Anne Ring Petersen, Storbyens billeder: fra industrialisme til informationsalder, Museum Tusculanum Press (?ISBN), page 113
      ... vil de, skriver Allouay, fortrinsvis vække associationer af urban karakter.
      ... they will, Allouay writes, predominantly arouse associations of an urban/urbane character.
    • 1999, Bogens verden
      ... hvert sted åbner der sig en verden af formrigdom, af mulige associationer, af historier og sammenhænge, som kan foldes ud af det banale.
      ... everywhere, a world of shape-wealth, of possible associations, of stories and connections that can be unfolded from banality opens.
  2. group of persons united for some purpose

Declension

Further reading

  • “association” in Den Danske Ordbog

French

Etymology

From associer +? -tion.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /a.s?.sja.sj??/
  • Homophone: associations

Noun

association f (plural associations)

  1. association, society, group
  2. (commerce, economics) partnership
  3. association (of related terms, ideas etc.), combination
  4. (object-oriented programming) association

Derived terms

  • association libre

Descendants

  • ? Romanian: asocia?ie

Further reading

  • “association” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

association From the web:

  • what association mean
  • what association maintains and publishes cpt
  • what association publishes the cpt
  • what associations offer health insurance
  • what associations are learned during extinction
  • what associations today are the descendants of the guild
  • what association is correct
  • what association is learned in classical conditioning


chapel

English

Etymology

From Middle English chapel, chapelle, from Old French chapele, from Late Latin cappella (little cloak; chapel), diminutive of cappa (cloak, cape). Doublet of capelle.

(printing office): Said to be because printing was first carried on in England in a chapel near Westminster Abbey.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?t?æ.p?l/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /?t?æ.p?l/
  • (US)
  • Rhymes: -æp?l

Noun

chapel (plural chapels)

  1. (especially Christianity) A place of worship, smaller than or subordinate to a church.
  2. A place of worship in another building or within a civil institution such as a larger church, airport, prison, monastery, school, etc.; often primarily for private prayer.
  3. A funeral home, or a room in one for holding funeral services.
  4. (Britain) A trade union branch in printing or journalism.
  5. A printing office.
  6. A choir of singers, or an orchestra, attached to the court of a prince or nobleman.

Derived terms

Translations

Adjective

chapel (not comparable)

  1. (Wales) Describing a person who attends a nonconformist chapel.

Verb

chapel (third-person singular simple present chapels, present participle chapelling, simple past and past participle chapelled)

  1. (nautical, transitive) To cause (a ship taken aback in a light breeze) to turn or make a circuit so as to recover, without bracing the yards, the same tack on which she had been sailing.
  2. (obsolete, transitive) To deposit or inter in a chapel; to enshrine.
    • give us the bones Of our dead kings, that we may chapel them!

References

Anagrams

  • Lepcha, cephal-, pleach

Old French

Etymology

From Vulgar Latin *cappellus, diminutive of Late Latin cappa.

Noun

chapel m (oblique plural chapeaus or chapeax or chapiaus or chapiax or chapels, nominative singular chapeaus or chapeax or chapiaus or chapiax or chapels, nominative plural chapel)

  1. hat (item of clothing used to cover the head)

Related terms

  • chape

Descendants

  • Gallo: chapai
  • Middle French: chappeau
    • French: chapeau
  • Norman: chape
  • Walloon: tchapea

Welsh

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??ap?l/

Noun

chapel

  1. aspirate mutation of capel

chapel From the web:

  • what chapel did michelangelo paint
  • what chapel was in the hangover
  • what chapel is prince philip funeral
  • what chapel burned down
  • what chapels are at windsor castle
  • what chapel was used in the hangover
  • what chapel is prince philip
  • why did they paint the sistine chapel
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like