I will travel there by plane and subsequently, I will rent a car
there the same meaning
None, same meaning.
it depends what you are talking about...
The meaning of differentiate is the process of determining the difference between several objects. For example: He was not able to differentiate between the red apples and the red peaches.
Inflammable is used in England where Americans would say flammable.
No, "subsequent" and "consecutive" are not the same. "Subsequent" refers to something that follows in time or order, but it doesn't imply a direct sequence. In contrast, "consecutive" specifically indicates events or items occurring one after the other, without interruption. While they can overlap in meaning, they are used in different contexts.
The difference between any two consecutive lower (or upper) class limits it the class width.
16 and 17 are the first two consecutive WHOLE numbers. Consecutive has no meaning for the real numbers since a another can be found between any two.
consecutive; one follows the other with no others in between
no
There is no grammatical difference between two nouns. If they have different meaning, then there is a lexical difference.
There is no difference in the meaning. Lettonia is Italian for Latvia.
The concept of consecutive has no meaning for fractions. This is because there are infinitely many fractions between any two fractions. And between any two of them, there are infinitely many, and so on. As a result, there cannot be any "next" fraction.
21 and 22 are consecutive composite numbers.
there the same meaning
No
according to me ,there is no difference between yet and nevertheless since both have same meaning .