different between introductory vs supplementary
introductory
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Late Latin intr?duct?rius, from Latin intr?ductus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??ntr??d?kt?ri/
Adjective
introductory (not comparable)
- Introducing; giving a preview or idea of.
- He enrolled in an introductory wine-making course.
Synonyms
- prefatory
Related terms
- introduce
- introduction
Translations
introductory From the web:
- what introductory paragraph
- what introduction
- what introduction mean
- what introduction paragraph
- what introduction in an essay
- what introductions do for songs
- what introduction twice always say
- what introduction to business
supplementary
English
Etymology
Derived from French supplémentaire.
Adjective
supplementary (comparative more supplementary, superlative most supplementary)
- Additional; added to supply what is wanted.
Derived terms
- nonsupplementary
- presupplementary
- supplementary angles
Translations
Noun
supplementary (plural supplementaries)
- Something additional; an extra.
References
- Webster, Noah (1828) , “supplementary”, in An American Dictionary of the English Language
supplementary From the web:
- what supplementary angles
- what supplementary mean
- what supplementary form
- what supplementary welfare allowance
- what supplementary material do i need
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