different between attendant vs additional
attendant
English
Alternative forms
- attendaunt (obsolete)
Etymology
From Middle English attendant, attendaunt, from Old French attendant.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??t?nd?nt/
Noun
attendant (plural attendants)
- One who attends; one who works with or watches over something.
- A servant or valet.
- (chiefly archaic) A visitor or caller.
- That which accompanies or follows.
- (law) One who owes a duty or service to another.
Translations
Adjective
attendant (comparative more attendant, superlative most attendant)
- Going with; associated; concomitant.
- (law) Depending on, or owing duty or service to.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Cowell to this entry?)
Translations
See also
- part and parcel
French
Pronunciation
Verb
attendant
- present participle of attendre
Derived terms
- en attendant
- en attendant que
Latin
Pronunciation
- (Classical) IPA(key): /at?ten.dant/, [ät??t??n?d?än?t?]
- (Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /at?ten.dant/, [?t??t??n?d??n?t?]
Verb
attendant
- third-person plural present active subjunctive of attend?
attendant From the web:
- attendant means
- what attendant at birth
- what attendant circumstances
- what attendant in english
- what does attendant mean
- what flight attendant do
- what is attendant care
- what flight attendants say
additional
English
Alternative forms
- add'l (abbreviation)
Etymology
addition +? -al
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??d???n?l/
Adjective
additional (not comparable)
- Supplemental or added to something.
Derived terms
- additionally
Translations
Noun
additional (plural additionals)
- Something added.
- 1614, Francis Bacon, “A Letter to the King touching Peacham’s Cause. January 27. 1614” in Resuscitatio, or, Bringing into publick light severall pieces of the works […] of Francis Bacon, London: William Lee, 1657, p. 49,[1]
- For having received, from my Lord, an Additional, of great Importance; which was, that Owen, of his own Accord, after Examination, should compare the Case of your Majesty, (if you were Excommunicate,) to the Case, of a Prisoner, Condemned at the Barr; which Additional was subscribed by one Witness; but yet I perceived it was spoken aloud, and in the Hearing of others; I presently sent down a Copy thereof […]
- 1692, Anthony à Wood, Athenæ Oxonienses, London: Thomas Bennet, p. 248,[2]
- […] having been well vers’d in British Histories, and a singular lover of Antiquities, [he] made many additionals to the Historie of Cambria published by Dav. Powell […]
- 1614, Francis Bacon, “A Letter to the King touching Peacham’s Cause. January 27. 1614” in Resuscitatio, or, Bringing into publick light severall pieces of the works […] of Francis Bacon, London: William Lee, 1657, p. 49,[1]
additional From the web:
- what additional force when applied to the object
- what additional evidence for n400
- what happens when force is applied to an object
- how is force applied to an object
- how to find force applied on an object
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