different between breadth vs wideness

breadth

English

Etymology

From Middle English breedthe, bredethe, alteration (due to nouns ending in -th: length, strength, wrength, etc.) of Middle English brede ("breadth"; see bread). Equivalent to broad +? -th. Cognate with Scots bredth (breadth), Saterland Frisian Bratte (breadth), West Frisian breedte (breadth), Dutch breedte (breadth), German Low German Breddte, Breddt (breadth), German Breite (breadth), Danish bredde (breadth), Swedish bredd (breadth).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /b??d?/, /b??t?/, /b???/
  • Rhymes: -?d?

Noun

breadth (countable and uncountable, plural breadths)

  1. The extent or measure of how broad or wide something is.
  2. A piece of fabric of standard width.
  3. Scope or range, especially of knowledge or skill.
  4. (art) A style in painting in which details are strictly subordinated to the harmony of the whole composition.
  5. (graph theory) The length of the longest path between two vertices in a graph.

Synonyms

  • (extent or measure of how broad something is): width
  • (piece of fabric of standard width):
  • (scope or range): extent, range, scope, size

Derived terms

Translations

breadth From the web:

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wideness

English

Etymology

From Middle English widenes, widenesse, from Old English w?dnes, w?dness (width, wideness), equivalent to wide +? -ness.

Noun

wideness (usually uncountable, plural widenesses)

  1. The state or quality of being wide.
  2. Large extent or expanse; breadth, broadness.

Synonyms

  • width

Related terms

  • wide
  • widely
  • widen

Translations

Anagrams

  • desinews, dewiness

wideness From the web:

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