different between testing vs frosh
testing
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?t?st??/
- Rhymes: -?st??
Adjective
testing (comparative more testing, superlative most testing)
- difficult, tough
Noun
testing (countable and uncountable, plural testings)
- The act of conducting a test; trialing, proving.
- 2011, Emerson B. Powery, Immersion Bible Studies: Luke
- The wilderness testings of Jesus prepare him for ministry in which such temptations and shortcuts will recur.
- 2011, Emerson B. Powery, Immersion Bible Studies: Luke
Hyponyms
Translations
References
- Testing on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Verb
testing
- present participle of test
Anagrams
- setting, tingest
Cebuano
Etymology
From English testing, present participle of test, from Middle English test, teste, borrowed from Old French test, teste (“an earthen vessel, especially a pot in which metals were tried”), from Latin testum (“the lid of an earthen vessel, an earthen vessel, an earthen pot”), from *terstus, past participle of the root *tersa (“dry land”).
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: tes?ting
Verb
testing
- to test someone or something
Noun
testing
- a testing; the act of conducting a test
Quotations
For quotations using this term, see Citations:testing.
Indonesian
Etymology
Unadapted borrowing from English testing.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [?t??st???]
- Hyphenation: tès?ting
Noun
testing (first-person possessive testingku, second-person possessive testingmu, third-person possessive testingnya)
- testing.
- Synonyms: pengujian, percobaan
Further reading
- “testing” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia (KBBI) Daring, Jakarta: Badan Pengembangan dan Pembinaan Bahasa, Kementerian Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan Republik Indonesia, 2016.
testing From the web:
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frosh
English
Pronunciation
- (US)
- (General American) IPA(key): /f???/
- (cot–caught merger) IPA(key): /f???/
Etymology 1
From Middle English frossh, frosch, from Old English fros? (“frog”), from Proto-Germanic *fruskaz (“frog”), from Proto-Indo-European *prew- (“to jump, hop”). Cognate with West Frisian froask (“frog”), Dutch vors (“frog”), German Frosch (“frog”), Norwegian frosk (“frog”), Icelandic froskur (“frog”). See also frosk, frog.
Noun
frosh (plural froshes)
- (now dialectal) A frog.
- 1565 (1593), Golding, Ovid's Met. xv. (1593) pg. 356:
- The mud hath in it certaine seed whereof greene froshes rise.
- 1565 (1593), Golding, Ovid's Met. xv. (1593) pg. 356:
Translations
Etymology 2
Blend of freshman +? sophomore.
Noun
frosh (plural froshes or frosh)
- (colloquial) A first-year student, at certain universities, and a first-or-second-year student at other universities.
- That frosh is really getting on my nerves!
Synonyms
- underclassman
- newbie
- fresher (UK)
Derived terms
- prefrosh
Translations
Verb
frosh (third-person singular simple present froshes, present participle froshing, simple past and past participle froshed)
- (transitive, slang) To initiate academic freshmen, notably in a testing way.
- This campus does not tolerate froshing in any form.
- (transitive, slang) To damage through incompetence.
- Trying to open my car door with a coat hanger, I froshed the mechanism.
Synonyms
- (initiate): haze
Derived terms
- froshing
Translations
Middle English
Noun
frosh
- Alternative form of frossh
frosh From the web:
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- word with force
- what does frosh mean
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- what does frosh mean in high school
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