different between titanic vs manifold

titanic

English

Pronunciation

  • enPR: t?t?n??k IPA(key): /ta??tæn.?k/
  • Rhymes: -æn?k

Etymology 1

Titan +? -ic

Adjective

titanic (comparative more titanic, superlative most titanic)

  1. Having great size, or great strength, force or power.
Usage notes
  • The adjective is no longer in wide use, due to its strong negative association with the wreck of the ocean liner Titanic.
See also
  • titanic prime
Synonyms
  • See also Thesaurus:gigantic
Translations

Etymology 2

titan(ium) +? -ic

Adjective

titanic (not comparable)

  1. (inorganic chemistry) Of or relating to titanium, especially tetravalent titanium
Derived terms
Related terms
  • titanous

Anagrams

  • Tanitic

Romanian

Etymology

From French titanique.

Adjective

titanic m or n (feminine singular titanic?, masculine plural titanici, feminine and neuter plural titanice)

  1. titanic

Declension

titanic From the web:

  • what titanic character are you
  • what titanic means
  • what titanic looks like today
  • what titanic looks like now
  • what titanic sank
  • what titanic looks like inside
  • what titanic survivors are still alive
  • what titanic got wrong


manifold

English

Alternative forms

  • manyfold

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /?mæn??fo?ld/, (nonstandard) /?m?n??fo?ld/, /?m?ni?fo?ld/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?mæn??f??ld/
  • Hyphenation: man?i?fold
  • Rhymes: -æn?fo?ld

Etymology 1

From Middle English manifold, from Old English mani?feald (manifold, various, varied, complicated, numerous, abundant, plural), from Proto-Germanic *managafalþaz, equivalent to many +? -fold. Cognate with Middle High German manecvalt (manifold), Icelandic margfaldr (multiple). Compare also German mannigfaltig (various), Dutch menigvoudig (various), Danish mangefold (multiple), Swedish mångfald (diversity).

Adjective

manifold (comparative more manifold, superlative most manifold)

  1. Various in kind or quality; diverse.
  2. Many in number, numerous; multiple, multiplied.
  3. Complicated.
  4. Exhibited at diverse times or in various ways.
    • c. 1384, I Petre 4:10 (Wycliffe's Bible):
      ... the manyfold grace of God.
    • 1611, Ephesians 3:10 (w:King James Bible):
      The manifold wisdom of God.
Synonyms
  • (various in kind or quality): diverse, various, varied, multiplicitous; See also Thesaurus:heterogeneous
  • (many in number): multiple, numerous; see also Thesaurus:manifold
Antonyms
  • onefold
  • singlefold
Derived terms
  • manifolder
  • manifoldly
  • manifoldness
Translations

Adverb

manifold (comparative more manifold, superlative most manifold)

  1. Many times; repeatedly.
Synonyms
  • manyfold, frequently, ofttimes; see also Thesaurus:often

Noun

manifold (plural manifolds)

  1. (historical) A copy made by the manifold writing process.
  2. (mechanics) A pipe fitting or similar device that connects multiple inputs or outputs.
  3. (US, regional, chiefly in the plural) The third stomach of a ruminant animal, an omasum.
    • 1830 Anson, Somerset Co. Me., accessed 12 June 2007
      My conjecture being right he will find the third stomach, or manifolds, the seat of difficulty.
  4. (mathematics) A topological space that looks locally like the "ordinary" Euclidean space R n {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{n}} and is Hausdorff.
  5. (computer graphics) A polygon mesh representing the continuous, closed surface of a solid object
Usage notes

In mathematics, a manifold of some number of dimensions n is termed an n-manifold (e.g. 3-manifold).

Hyponyms
Derived terms
Translations

Etymology 2

From Middle English manifolden, from Old English mani?fealdan (to multiply, abound, increase, extend, reward), equivalent to many +? -fold. Cognate with Middle High German manecvalten, Icelandic margfalda (to multiply), Swedish mångfaldiga (to manifold, reproduce).

Verb

manifold (third-person singular simple present manifolds, present participle manifolding, simple past and past participle manifolded)

  1. (transitive) To make manifold; multiply.
  2. (transitive, printing) To multiply or reproduce impressions of by a single operation.
Translations

manifold From the web:

  • manifold meaning
  • what's manifold pressure
  • what's manifold absolute pressure
  • what manifold gasket
  • what manifold for turbo
  • what manifold for k24a2
  • what manifold temperature
  • what manifold intake
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