different between continuant vs discontinuous
continuant
English
Etymology
continue +? -ant
Noun
continuant (plural continuants)
- (phonetics) A linguistic sound other than a stop.
- Coordinate term: sonorant
- (mathematics) A determinant formed from a tridiagonal matrix.
- (ontology) An endurant.
Translations
Adjective
continuant (comparative more continuant, superlative most continuant)
- Continuing; prolonged; sustained.
Translations
Further reading
- continuant on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Catalan
Verb
continuant
- present participle of continuar
French
Verb
continuant
- present participle of continuer
Latin
Verb
continuant
- third-person plural present active indicative of continu?
continuant From the web:
- what are continuant sounds
- what does contingent mean
- what are continuant phonemes
- what does continuant consonant mean
- what does consonant mean in phonetics
- what does consonant mean in linguistics
- what is continuant with examples
- what is continuant speech
discontinuous
English
Etymology
From dis- +? continuous.
Adjective
discontinuous (not comparable)
- having breaks or interruptions; intermittent
- Synonyms: patchy, spasmodic; see also Thesaurus:discontinuous
- Antonym: continuous
- (mathematics) having at least one discontinuity
- Antonym: continuous
Related terms
- discontinuity
Translations
discontinuous From the web:
- what discontinuous variation
- what's discontinuous innovation
- what discontinuous mean
- what discontinuous variable
- what discontinuous change
- what discontinuous phase
- what discontinuous morpheme
- what's discontinuous replication
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- continuant vs discontinuous
- continuant vs contingent
- continuant vs obstruent
- continuant vs lateral
- sustained vs continuant
- prolonged vs continuant
- matrix vs continuant
- tridiagonal vs continuant
- determinant vs continuant
- thirsty vs dehydration
- hangover vs dehydration
- dehydration vs dehydrogenation
- thirst vs dehydration
- dehydration vs dessication
- dehydration vs overhydration
- dehydration vs efflorescence
- drought vs dehydration
- desiccating vs dehydration
- imitation vs forged
- forged vs assumed