relative - is someone who is in your family relevant - a word or object that has bearing on the subject your speaking of. (The information was relevant to the defendants case) Not much but relative is relating each to the other where relevant is having to do with the other. Like you and your brother are related. Yet, you may not be the same, which would be relevant. Other ways of relevant are if your talking about an issue , is all the information on the issue relevant to the subject. Not always.
Both words meanings are same actually
They are synonymous to each other. You can use both words in different sentences for they have only one meaning.
A hypothesis is a model or in other words a design of experiments to be tested with some theoretical basis and requires testing to verify the expected course
A hypothesis is a model or in other words a design of experiments to be tested with some theoretical basis and requires testing to verify the expected course
in mathematical statistics qualitative means not numbers so it has to be expressed in words e.g. a color quantative: means a number e.g. age.
What is the difference between the two words, phagia, and phasia
The term terminology consist of words that are relevant to a certain subject, theory, or profession. The term grammar however, only refers to words that must be applied correctly.
The difference between the interrogative pronouns who, whom, and which and the relative pronouns who, whom, and which is in their use.An interrogative pronoun introduces a question:Who was at the door?To whom should I give the notice?Which is your apartment?A relative pronoun introduces a relative clause, a group of words that relates to the antecedent which precedes it:The man who was at the door was the super.The one to whom I gave the notice was the super.The notice which I gave to the super was about a scheduled power outage.
There is no difference between Fard and Wajib they are synonymous words
What is the difference between euphemism and dysphemism?" Dysphemism is negative words and euphemism is more towards positive words
In a statute, what is the difference between the words 'means' and 'includes' when heading a list?
there really isn't a difference
Slang words are words that are not in the dictionary.
The difference between the words argue and persuade are . Argue is a form of relevating to what you are going to rgue abojnklf;uyikofjjiy
There is a subtle but important difference between the use of that and which in a sentence, and it has to do primarily with relevance. Grammarians often use the terms "restrictive" and "non-restrictive" when it comes to relative clauses. A relative clause provides additional information about the noun it describes, but it may be considered relevant or irrelevant to the overall point of the sentence. In other words, a restrictive relative clause, which often begins with that, is usually considered essential or restrictive. Relative clauses beginning with which may contain non-essential information and would be considered non-restrictive.Or simply: Use which when it introduces a new clause in the same sentence. Use that when it begins a new sentence. Thus we say "You never know, which is why..." and we say "You never know. That is why..."
There is obviously no difference, just choice of words.
what is the difference?