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The short answer: yes. Some may argue they are not the same, or are at least not "politically correct", that one should use "differently-abled" or other terms that no one can keep up with.
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The two terms that refer to formal public speaking are oration and public address. This will also depend on the context as other words that can be used include lecture and discourse.
Argentine is a term used to refer to natives of Argentina. Other terms that can be used to refer to citizens of this country include Argentinian and Argentinean.
Terms of use refer to agreements for usage of products. Medical terms refer to common Latin based definitions of conditions. Terms in school can refer to quarters, semesters or years.
Other terms which refer to shady, scared and mischievous people beside gusanito could be terms like irritating, teasing, naughty, devilish, wicked and injurious.
They are homophones.
Because other websites do things differently and have it organized more different!
The abbreviation for counsel is COL. This will generally refer to legal counsel, with COL being used to refer to several other terms as well, such as college of law.
taxation
anatomical terms that refer to specific visible landmarkscon the surface of the body
These are terms to refer to where terms and words are in relation to each other. A root word can stand alone or with a suffix. If there is a term added to the front, that is called a prefix.