Simply put, not much. The words are often used interchangeably. If you want to be more specific, historic refers to important things in the past, while historical refers to anything in the past, regardless of its importance. For example:
The Battle of Gettysburg is an historic event.
I like to read historical novels.
Fumarole is the historic word for furnace
Historical is an adjective.
Historical is an adjective.
The Alamo is a historic landmark because a battle between Mexico and America was fought there.The historic vehicle was carefully preserved in the museum.It was an historic event commemorated with a bronze plaque.
There is no such word in English. In whatever language you speak, there may be, but English, although it has history, historian, historic, historical, and historiography does not have a word "historia". It is a word in Latin, meaning a story.
The adjective is historic and the noun base is history.
I don't see any difference.
The difference is that there is an extra word
A prefix is a morpheme added to the beginning of a word to modify its meaning. In the case of "historic," a possible prefix could be "pre-," which means "before." Therefore, a prefix of "historic" could be "prehistoric," indicating something that occurred before recorded history.
Cannot is correct. Can not is incorrect.
Three antonyms for the word "historic" are; insignificant, unimportant, and unremarkable.
-The difference between there, their, and they're is commonly confused.