different between prognostic vs resultant
prognostic
English
Alternative forms
- prognostick (obsolete)
Etymology
From Medieval Latin prognosticus, from Ancient Greek ???????????? (progn?stikós, “foreknowing”), from ???- (pró-) + ????????? (gn?stikós, “of or for knowing, good at knowing”), from ???????? (gign?sk?, “to learn to know, to perceive, to mark, to learn”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /p????n?st?k/, /p????n?st?k/
Adjective
prognostic (comparative more prognostic, superlative most prognostic)
- Of, pertaining to or characterized by prognosis or prediction.
Synonyms
- foretelling
- predictive
Translations
Noun
prognostic (plural prognostics)
- (rare, medicine) prognosis
- 1935, T.S. Eliot, Murder in the Cathedral, Part I:
- There are several opinions as to what he meant
But no one considers it a happy prognostic.
- There are several opinions as to what he meant
- 1809, Bartholomew Parr, "PROGNOSIS" in The London Medical Dictionary
- The appearance of the tongue is closely connected with the sense of thirst, and is of considerable importance as a prognostic.
- 1935, T.S. Eliot, Murder in the Cathedral, Part I:
- A sign by which a future event may be known or foretold.
- 1710, Jonathan Swift, "A Description of a City Shower"
- Careful observers may foretell the hour
(By sure prognostics) when to dread a show’r.
While rain depends, the pensive cat gives o’er
Her frolics, and pursues her tail no more.
- Careful observers may foretell the hour
- 1710, Jonathan Swift, "A Description of a City Shower"
- A prediction of the future.
- One who predicts the future.
Synonyms
- (sign): indication, sign, omen, foretelling, prediction
Related terms
- prognostatic
- prognosis
- prognosticable
- prognosticate
Anagrams
- topscoring
Middle French
Noun
prognostic m (plural prognostics)
- prognostic (prediction about the future)
Descendants
- French: pronostic
prognostic From the web:
- prognosticate meaning
- what prognostic indicator
- prognosticate what does it mean
- what is prognostic test
- what are prognostic factors
- what is prognostic chart
- what is prognostic test in education
- what is prognostic assessment
resultant
English
Etymology
From Latin result?ns, present participle of result?.
Adjective
resultant (not comparable)
- following as a result or consequence of something; resulting.
Translations
Noun
resultant (plural resultants)
- anything that results from something else; an outcome
- (mathematics) a vector that is the vector sum of multiple vectors
Anagrams
- Stlaurent
Catalan
Verb
resultant
- present participle of resultar
resultant From the web:
- what resultant force
- what's resultant force in physics
- what's resultant velocity
- what resultant of two vectors
- what resultant acceleration
- what resultant vector is
- what resultant wave
- resultant meaning
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- prognostic vs resultant
- resultant vs displacement
- accompany vs resultant
- recurrent vs resultant
- resultant vs resulted
- content vs blimp
- blimp vs drone
- blimp vs blim
- blimp vs limp
- blimp vs klimp
- blip vs blimp
- blimp vs belimp
- interrupting vs interfere
- interrupt vs interrupting
- interrupting vs disturb
- interrupting vs interjecting
- disrupting vs interrupting
- interrupting vs intruding
- intrudin vs interrupting
- disturbing vs interrupting