different between vegetation vs vestige

vegetation

English

Etymology

From Middle French végétation.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?v?d????te???n/
  • Rhymes: -e???n

Noun

vegetation (countable and uncountable, plural vegetations)

  1. (uncountable) Plants, taken collectively.
    There were large amounts of vegetation in the forest.
  2. (pathology, countable) An abnormal verrucous or fibrinous growth
  3. The act or process of vegetating, or growing as a plant does; vegetable growth.

Derived terms

  • devegetation

Translations


Swedish

Noun

vegetation c

  1. vegetation.

Declension

vegetation From the web:

  • what vegetation is in the tundra
  • what vegetation grows in the land of the midnight sun
  • what vegetation zones are in west africa
  • what vegetation grows in the tundra
  • what vegetation is in the desert
  • what vegetation is typical of central africa
  • what vegetation grows in the desert
  • what vegetation is found in the tundra


vestige

English

Etymology

From French vestige, from Latin vest?gium (footstep, footprint, track, the sole of the foot, a trace, mark).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?v?.st?d??/

Noun

vestige (plural vestiges)

  1. The mark of the foot left on the earth.
    Synonyms: trace, sign, track, footstep
  2. (by extension) A faint mark or visible sign left by something which is lost, or has perished, or is no longer present.
    Synonym: remains
  3. (biology) A vestigial organ; a non-functional organ or body part that was once functional in an evolutionary ancestor.
    • 1904 Transactions of the [] annual session, Volume 40, Homeopathic Medical Society of the State of Pennsylvania, p160
      Any person seeing such a condition could not help being frightened at the conditions found, and it seems to me that that fact should lead us to think that the appendix is a vestige or becoming so.
    • 1932 John Arthur Thomson, Riddles of science, Ayer Publishing, p824
      Now this paired organ of Jacobsen began in reptiles and is well developed in many mammals. But in man it is a vestige, often disappearing altogether; and the two openings are closed.
    • 2007 R. Randal Bollingera, Andrew S. Barbasa, Errol L. Busha, Shu S. Lina, & William Parkera, "Biofilms in the large bowel suggest an apparent function of the human vermiform appendix," Journal of Theoretical Biology
      This idea was confirmed by Scott, who performed a detailed comparative analysis of primate anatomy and demonstrated conclusively that the appendix is derived for some unidentified function and is not a vestige.

Derived terms

  • vestigial

Translations

See also

  • hint
  • trace

Further reading

  • vestige in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • vestige in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.

Dutch

Pronunciation

Verb

vestige

  1. (archaic) singular present subjunctive of vestigen

Anagrams

  • stevige

French

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin vest?gium.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /v?s.ti?/

Noun

vestige m (plural vestiges)

  1. vestige, relic

Derived terms

  • vestigial

Further reading

  • “vestige” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

vestige From the web:

  • what vestige of the notochord is found in vertebrates
  • what vestige do
  • what's vestige marketing
  • vestige meaning
  • vestige what does this mean
  • vestige what is the definition
  • what is vestige business
  • what is vestige in hindi
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like