different between petition vs readiness
petition
English
Etymology
From Middle English, borrowed from Old French peticiun, from stem of Latin petitio, petitionem (“a request, solicitation”), from petere (“to require, seek, go forward”)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /p??t?.??n/
Noun
petition (plural petitions)
- A formal, written request made to an official person or organized body, often containing many signatures.
- A compilation of signatures built in order to exert moral authority in support of a specific cause.
- (law) A formal written request for judicial action.
- A prayer; a supplication; an entreaty.
- A house of prayer and petition for thy people.
Translations
Verb
petition (third-person singular simple present petitions, present participle petitioning, simple past and past participle petitioned)
- (transitive) To make a request to, commonly in written form.
Translations
petition From the web:
- what petition means
- what petitioner means
- what petitions have worked
- what petition was filed by quakers
- what petition does claudius approve
- what petition came out of the congress
- what petition was sent to king george
- what petitions do
readiness
English
Etymology
ready +? -ness
Noun
readiness (usually uncountable, plural readinesses)
- The state or degree of being ready; preparedness.
- Willingness.
Translations
Anagrams
- arsenides, nearsides
readiness From the web:
- what readiness condition is general quarters
- what readiness means
- what's readiness potential
- what readiness to learn
- what does readiness mean
- what is readiness in education
- what is readiness in marriage
- what is readiness probe and liveness probe in kubernetes
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