different between unactive vs deactivate
unactive
English
Etymology
un- +? active
Adjective
unactive (comparative more unactive, superlative most unactive)
- Not active; inactive.
Synonyms
- abeyant, dormant, latent; see also Thesaurus:inactive
unactive From the web:
- what inactive mean
- what inactive ingredients are in the covid vaccine
- what inactive ingredients mean
- what inactive ingredients contain gluten
- what inactive volcano
- what inactive volcano in the philippines
- what inactive ingredients are in aspirin
- what inactive means in roblox
deactivate
English
Alternative forms
- de-activate
- deäctivate
Etymology
de- +? activate
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?di??ækt?ve?t/
Verb
deactivate (third-person singular simple present deactivates, present participle deactivating, simple past and past participle deactivated)
- (ergative) to make something inactive or no longer effective
- to prevent the action of a biochemical agent (such as an enzyme)
- to remove a person or piece of hardware from active military service
Translations
See also
- activate
- inactivate
deactivate From the web:
- what deactivates slime
- what deactivate mean
- what deactivates super glue
- what deactivates birth control
- what deactivates yeast
- what deactivates birth control pills
- what deactivates adderall
- what deactivates security tags
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- unactive vs deactivate
- unactivate vs deactivate
- withdraw vs deactivate
- incapacitate vs disenable
- disenable vs disengage
- diseable vs disenable
- disenable vs disenabled
- terms vs disenable
- disenable vs disable
- stolen vs robbery
- stolen vs panettone
- snagged vs stolen
- stolen vs looted
- stolen vs burgled
- filched vs stolen
- stolen vs took
- barge vs sampan
- sampan vs junk
- sampan vs tampan
- sanpan vs sampan