different between seismic vs microseismic
seismic
English
Etymology
Based on Ancient Greek ??????? (seismós, “shaking, earthquake”) +? -ic.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?sa?zm?k/
- Rhymes: -a?zm?k.
Adjective
seismic (not comparable)
- Related to, or caused by an earthquake or other vibration of the Earth.
- (figuratively) Of very large or widespread effect.
Derived terms
Translations
Romanian
Etymology
From French séismique
Adjective
seismic m or n (feminine singular seismic?, masculine plural seismici, feminine and neuter plural seismice)
- seismic
Declension
seismic From the web:
- what seismic waves
- what seismic wave travels the fastest
- what seismic waves cause the most damage
- what seismic wave is the most destructive
- what seismic waves are the first to reach a seismograph
- what seismic wave is the fastest
- what seismic zone am i in
- what seismic wave does the most damage
microseismic
English
Etymology
micro- +? seismic
Adjective
microseismic (not comparable)
- Describing any small seismic event that causes little or no damage or disturbance
microseismic From the web:
- microseismic what does it mean
- what is microseismic monitoring
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- seismic vs microseismic
- microseismic vs macroseismic
- seismic vs macroseismic
- seismicity vs size
- seismicity vs siesmicity
- seismic vs seismicity
- earthquake vs seismographer
- halfspace vs halfpace
- plane vs halfspace
- autopoiesis vs practopoiesis
- homeostasis vs autopoiesis
- autopoiesis vs autopoietic
- heteropoiesis vs autopoiesis
- autopoiesis vs allopoiesis
- autopoiesis vs abiogenesis
- heteropoiesis vs allopoiesis
- allopoiesis vs indexphp
- allopoiesis vs abiogenesis
- vulcanized vs vulcanizer
- vulcanized vs vulcanizes