different between scheme vs tendency

scheme

English

Etymology

From Medieval Latin sch?ma (figure, form), from Ancient Greek ????? (skhêma, form, shape), from ??? (ékh?, I hold). Doublet of schema. Compare sketch.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ski?m/
  • Rhymes: -i?m

Noun

scheme (plural schemes)

  1. A systematic plan of future action.
    • c. 1713, Jonathan Swift, Thoughts on Various Subjects
      The stoical scheme of supplying our wants by lopping off our desires, is like cutting off our feet when we want shoes.
  2. A plot or secret, devious plan.
  3. An orderly combination of related parts.
    • the appearance and outward scheme of things
    • 1706, Francis Atterbury, A Sermon Preach'd in the Cathedral Church of St. Paul; at the Funeral of My. Tho. Bennett
      such a scheme of things as shall at once take in time and eternity
    • 1754, Jonathan Edwards, The Freedom of the Will
      arguments [] sufficient to support and demonstrate a whole scheme of moral philosophy
  4. A chart or diagram of a system or object.
    • April 29, 1694, Robert South, A Sermon Preached at Westminster Abbey
      to draw an exact scheme of Constantinople, or a map of France
  5. (mathematics) A type of geometric object.
  6. (Britain, chiefly Scotland) A council housing estate.
    • 2008, James Kelman, Kieron Smith, Boy, Penguin 2009, p. 101:
      It was all too dear. They all just put their prices up because it was out in the scheme.
  7. (rhetoric) An artful deviation from the ordinary arrangement of words.
  8. (astrology) A representation of the aspects of the celestial bodies for any moment or at a given event.
  9. (Internet) Part of a uniform resource identifier indicating the protocol or other purpose, such as http: or news:.
  10. (Britain, pensions) A portfolio of pension plans with related benefits comprising multiple independent members.

Usage notes

In the US, generally has devious connotations, while in the UK, frequently used as a neutral term for projects: “The road is closed due to a pavement-widening scheme.”

Synonyms

  • (a systematic plan of future action): blueprint

Derived terms

  • colour scheme
  • pilot scheme

Descendants

  • ? Malay: skim

Translations

Verb

scheme (third-person singular simple present schemes, present participle scheming, simple past and past participle schemed)

  1. (intransitive) To plot, or contrive a plan.
  2. (transitive) To plan; to contrive.
    • 1908, Bohemian Magazine (volume 15, page 381)
      He schemed a plot. He made use of the hotel's stationery to write a letter.

Translations

References

  • Silva Rhetoricae

Anagrams

  • Meches

Hunsrik

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??e?m?/

Verb

scheme

  1. (reflexive) to be ashamed

Further reading

  • Online Hunsrik Dictionary

Middle Low German

Etymology

From Old Saxon skimo (shadow). Originally masculine.

Pronunciation

  • Stem vowel: ?¹
    • (originally) IPA(key): /sk??m?/

Noun

scheme m or f

  1. A shadow, a shade; a darkness created by an object obstructing light
  2. A shadow, a shade; something which is barely perceptible or not physical
    ...lose se van der walt der dusternisse unde van deme scheme des dodes. (" ...free them from the power of darkness and the shadow of death." )
  3. A shimmer; a soft or weak occurrence of light
  4. twilight; the lighting conditions at dusk and dawn
  5. A face mask
  6. aureola

Alternative forms

  • sceme

scheme From the web:

  • what scheme does juliet devise
  • what scheme mean
  • what scheme is planned by claudius and laertes
  • what scheme is claudius’s scheme for laertes
  • what scheme to use in disk utility
  • what scheme for macos
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  • what scheme has romeo devised


tendency

English

Etymology

Ultimately from Latin tendere / tend?.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?t?nd?nsi/
  • Hyphenation: ten?den?cy

Noun

tendency (plural tendencies)

  1. A likelihood of behaving in a particular way or going in a particular direction; a tending toward.
  2. (politics) An organised unit or faction within a larger political organisation.
    • 1974, James Boggs, Grace Lee Boggs, Revolution and Evolution, NYU Press ?ISBN, page 134
      Mao launched the struggle against the vulgar materialist tendency within the party as early as 1937.
    • 1997, S. Onslow, Backbench Debate within the Conservative Party and its Influence on British Foreign Policy, 1948-57, Springer ?ISBN, page 234
      In stark contrast to the Europeanist tendency within the party and the Suez Group, this group had a short history.
    • 2013, Richard Gillespie, Lourdes Lopez Nieto, Michael Waller, Factional Politics and Democratization, Routledge ?ISBN, page 83
      It reinforced the position of the conformist tendency within the party, since the majority of the candidates were old politicians, many of them members of Papandreou's centre-left CU faction back in the mid-1960s.

Synonyms

  • inclination
  • disposition
  • propensity
  • penchant
  • trend

Derived terms

  • multitendency

Translations

tendency From the web:

  • what tendency mean
  • what tendency in winston's mother has
  • what tendency am i
  • what tendency the coin shows
  • what does a tendency mean
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