different between reproduction vs mechanography
reproduction
English
Etymology
re- +? production
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??i?p???d?k??n/
- Hyphenation: re?pro?duc?tion
Noun
reproduction (countable and uncountable, plural reproductions)
- The act of reproducing new individuals biologically.
- The act of making copies.
- A copy of something, as in a piece of art; a duplicate.
- (computing) A method for reproducing a bug or problem.
Synonyms
- (sense 1): procreation
- (senses 2, 3, 4): repro
Derived terms
- sexual reproduction
- asexual reproduction
Related terms
- reproduce
Translations
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??.p??.dyk.sj??/
Noun
reproduction f (plural reproductions)
- reproduction
Related terms
- production
- reproductible
- reproductif
- reproduire
Further reading
- “reproduction” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
reproduction From the web:
- what reproduction is mitosis
- what reproduction by binary fission
- what reproduction means
- what reproduction is bacteria
- what reproduction does bacteria use
- what reproduction does a cactus go through
- what reproduction takes less time
- what reproduction does protists have
mechanography
English
Etymology
mechano- +? -graphy
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -????fi
Noun
mechanography (uncountable)
- The mechanical reproduction of documents.
Usage notes
- Used prior to modern technologies for this purpose such as photocopying.
mechanography From the web:
- what does mechanography mean
- isseo meaning
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- reproduction vs mechanography
- therapeutic vs reproductive
- reproduction vs reprography
- byproduct vs raphide
- production vs videographer
- substantive vs realistic
- limited vs undetermined
- guardian vs vigilante
- twist vs spring
- twist vs wring
- stabler vs staller
- unstalled vs unstabled
- stallers vs stablers
- stalled vs stabled
- portable vs installer
- stall vs stable
- preventable vs forestallable
- commentary vs backword
- virtue vs durability
- polished vs gleamy