different between strategy vs turtling
strategy
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ????????? (strat?gía, “office of general, command, generalship”), from ????????? (strat?gós, “the leader or commander of an army, a general”), from ??????? (stratós, “army”) + ??? (ág?, “I lead, I conduct”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?st?æt?d?i/
Noun
strategy (countable and uncountable, plural strategies)
- The science and art of military command as applied to the overall planning and conduct of warfare.
- A plan of action intended to accomplish a specific goal.
- (Can we clean up(+) this sense?) The use of advance planning to succeed in politics or business.
Usage notes
- Verbs often used with "strategy": drive, follow, pursue, execute, implement, adopt, abandon, accept, reject, create.
Synonyms
- generalship
Coordinate terms
- (an art of using similar techniques in politics or business): tactics
Derived terms
Related terms
- stratagem
- strategus
Translations
See also
- long game
Further reading
- strategy in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
- strategy in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
- strategy at OneLook Dictionary Search
strategy From the web:
- what strategy can prevent cross-contamination
- what strategy does the author of the essay
turtling
English
Etymology 1
turtle +? -ing
Noun
turtling (uncountable)
- The hunting of turtles (the reptiles).
- (nautical) Turning turtle.
- (figuratively) Any slow progression or build-up.
- (games (board, card, and computer)) A defensive strategy of avoiding conflict, usually in a fixed position.
Verb
turtling
- present participle of turtle
Etymology 2
From turtle +? -ling.
Noun
turtling (plural turtlings)
- A baby turtle.
- 1997, in Sportdiving (magazine), volumes 59–64,[1] page 94:
- The turtle-lings, kept in safety until they are three months old, are then released into the wild.
- 2012, Alexandra de Vries, Shawn Blore, Frommer's Brazil:
- Fifty days later, more or less, the little turtlings hatch, dig their way up through the sand, and make a mad scramble to the sea.
- 1997, in Sportdiving (magazine), volumes 59–64,[1] page 94:
Anagrams
- ruttling
turtling From the web:
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