different between organised vs systematic
organised
English
Alternative forms
- organized (US)
Adjective
organised (comparative more organised, superlative most organised)
- Alternative spelling of organized
Translations
Verb
organised
- simple past tense and past participle of organise
Derived terms
- organised crime
Anagrams
- angroside, diagnoser, dragonise, grandiose, organdies
organised From the web:
- what organised team sports are allowed
- what's organised crime
- organised meaning
- what's organised sector
- what organised sport
- what organised market
- what's organised in french
- what organised retail
systematic
English
Alternative forms
- (obsolete) systematick
Etymology
From French systématique, from Ancient Greek ???????????? (sust?matikós), from ??????? (súst?ma) +? -???? (-ikós). Doublet of systemic.
Pronunciation
- (UK, US) IPA(key): /?s?s.t??mæt.?k/
- Rhymes: -æt?k
Adjective
systematic (comparative more systematic, superlative most systematic)
- Carried out using a planned, ordered procedure.
- Methodical, regular and orderly.
- Of, or relating to taxonomic classification.
- (proscribed) Of, relating to, or being a system. (Can we add an example for this sense?)
Antonyms
- chaotic
- haphazard
- unsystematic
Derived terms
- systematically
- systematicity
- systematics
Related terms
- systemic
Translations
Adverb
systematic (comparative more systematic, superlative most systematic)
- (colloquial) systematically
systematic From the web:
- what systematic desensitization
- what systematic mean
- what systematic theology
- what systematic sampling
- what systemic changes are needed
- what systematic risk
- what systematic review
- what systematic literature review
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