different between outset vs incipience
outset
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?a?ts?t/
Etymology 1
From out- +? set, replacing earlier outsetting.
Noun
outset (plural outsets)
- The beginning or initial stage of something. [from 1759]
- He agreed and understood from the outset, so don't bother explaining again.
Translations
Further reading
- Douglas Harper (2001–2021) , “outset”, in Online Etymology Dictionary
Etymology 2
From out- +? set.
Verb
outset (third-person singular simple present outsets, present participle outsetting, simple past and past participle outset)
- (Internet, CSS, transitive) To cause (a design element) to extend around the outside of something else, the opposite of being inset.
Anagrams
- Stoute, Tetsuo, set out, setout
outset From the web:
- what outset means
- outset what game
- outset what does this mean
- what does outset of a rental mean
- what is outset medical
- what does outset of a claim mean
- what is outset in css
- what does outset
incipience
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin incipientia.
Noun
incipience (countable and uncountable, plural incipiences)
- A beginning, or first stage.
Related terms
- incipient
References
- OED 2nd edition 1989
Translations
incipience From the web:
- what does incipient mean
- what does incipience
- what do incipience mean
- incipient mean
- definition incipient
- def of incipient
- incipient define
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