No, they do not. Each of them has several meanings, and I can't think of any overlap between any of them.
Loyal and faithful mean essentially the same thing.
'Mimicking,' 'imitating' or 'copying' can mean to 'do the same thing'.
It can be interpreted as meaning the same thing. Yes.
yes
Although many people consider nobles snobbish or rude, they do not mean the same thing and this characterization is just a stereotype.
Action mode is the same thing.
(10,10,30,30,30,50,50) (20,20,30,30,30,40,40) These two sets have the same mean, median and mode.
no. default typing mode does not erase the words as you type, but overtype mode does.
Mean, median, and mode are all equal in a normal distribution.
yes
Maximum is the highest number in a set of data. Mode is the number that occurs the most So they're not the same thing.
No mean is the average of a group if data and mode is the number that occurs the most in a group of data
Yes.
No. Some distributions and some sets of observations can have more than one modes. In such cases there is no unique mode.
Yes, you can if you have 3 of the same number. For example, 33, 33, 33. Your mean, median and mode will be 33 for all the them.
In a normal distribution the mean, median and mode are all the same value.
Yes they mean the same thing.