No. They're not even closely related to being the same thing.
Yes, Fracture is the techincal term for a break.
In general, a broken bone and a fractured bone are the same thing and doctors will use the terms interchangeably.
destroyed, broken, wrecked, crushed, demolished, mashed
No, illegal means that one is breaking the law. Unconstitutional means that a law is not in compliance with the constitution. That does not mean that anyone will be charged with criminal activities. It usually means that a law is no longer valid and anyone charged under that law will not be prosecuted and any conviction will be overturned.
Lovely Broken Thing was created on 2005-11-09.
A broken machine?
the promise is broken when they break their promise to you
No. In fact, there is no such thing as a broken language.
Both are correct, but they convey slightly different meanings. "It is broken" describes the current state of something, indicating that it is not functioning properly. "It has broken" suggests that the action of breaking occurred in the past and is responsible for the current state.
No, a fracter jaw is not the same as a broken jaw. A fracter jaw is a condition in which the jaw joint becomes permanently dislocated, while a broken jaw refers to a fracture or break in the jaw bone. Both conditions require medical attention.
If a jaw is broken, the best thing is to see a doctor and fix it.
Because it is considered unconstitutional