different between ratify vs rect
ratify
English
Etymology
From Old French ratifier, from Medieval Latin ratifico, from Latin ratus (“reckoned”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??æt?fa?/, /??æt?fa?/
- Rhymes: -æt?fa?
Verb
ratify (third-person singular simple present ratifies, present participle ratifying, simple past and past participle ratified)
- (transitive) To give formal consent to; make officially valid, sign off on.
Synonyms
- (give formal consent to): approve
Related terms
- ratification
- ratifier
Translations
ratify From the web:
- what ratify means
- what ratify the new constitution
- what ratify treaties
- ratify what does it means
- what does ratify mean in law
- what is ratifying the constitution
- what does ratify the constitution mean
- what does ratify the era mean
rect
English
Noun
rect (plural rects)
- (computer graphics) Short for rectangle.
- Hypernym: poly
Old Irish
Noun
rect
- Alternative spelling of recht
Romanian
Etymology
From French rectum, from Latin rectum.
Noun
rect n (plural recturi)
- rectum
Declension
rect From the web:
- what rectangle
- what rectal temperature is considered a fever
- what rectal temp is considered a fever
- what rectangles are squares
- what rectal temperature indicates hyperthermia
- what rectangle is not a square
- what rectify means
- what rectal cancer looks like
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