different between facilitate vs speedup
facilitate
English
Etymology
From French faciliter, from Latin facilis
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /f??s?l?te?t/, /f??s?l?te?t/
Verb
facilitate (third-person singular simple present facilitates, present participle facilitating, simple past and past participle facilitated)
- To make easy or easier.
- To help bring about.
- To preside over (a meeting, a seminar).
Synonyms
- (to make easy or easier): ease
Related terms
Translations
Italian
Verb
facilitate
- second-person plural present indicative of facilitare
- second-person plural imperative of facilitare
- feminine plural of facilitato
Anagrams
- felicitata
Latin
Noun
facilit?te
- ablative singular of facilit?s
Romanian
Etymology
From Latin facilitas through French facilité
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [fat?ili?tate]
Noun
facilitate f (plural facilit??i)
- facility
Declension
facilitate From the web:
- what facilitated the rise of a global economy
- what facilitates gridlock
- what facilitated trading for the mayans
- what facilitated diffusion
- what facilitated performance
- what facilitates cell division
- what facilitates air exchange (breathing)
- what facilitate mean
speedup
English
Etymology
From the verb phrase speed up.
Noun
speedup (countable and uncountable, plural speedups)
- An amount or rate of decrease in time taken to do a certain amount of work.
- 1980, Alvin Toffler, The Third Wave (page 230)
- The results of this generalized speedup of the corporate metabolism are multiple: shorter product life cycles, more leasing and renting, more frequent buying and selling, more ephemeral consumption patterns, […]
- 1980, Alvin Toffler, The Third Wave (page 230)
- (chiefly computing) The relationship between time taken and number of processors used.
- (labor, politics) An employer's demand for more output without more pay.
Alternative forms
- speed-up
Translations
Derived terms
- Blum's speedup theorem
speedup From the web:
- what speeds up your metabolism
- what speeds up chemical reactions
- what speeds up chemical reactions in the body
- what speeds up cardiac muscle contractions
- what speeds up digestion
- what speeds up reactions
- what speeds up the rate of a chemical reaction
- what speeds up rigor mortis
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