No, "honorable" and "under honorable conditions" are not the same. "Honorable" typically refers to a discharge status that reflects exemplary service, while "under honorable conditions" indicates a discharge that is generally positive but may involve some minor issues that prevent it from being classified as fully honorable. The distinction can affect benefits and perceptions of a service member's record.
No
The same Benefits as you would get, if it was a regular Honorable Discharge....except for the GI Bill. Only members with Honorable discharges are eligible for this benefit.
There exactly the same
The word "respectable" has a similar meaning to honorable.
No, for one thing, liquids generally have a lesser density than solids. For another, no two materials/compounds can have the exact same density under the exact same conditions (i.e. temperature, pressure, etc...).
Reliably predictable.
yes
They are two different spellings of the same word.The US spelling is honorable, the UK spelling is honourable.
molecules
Two quotes from Mark Twain: I dont like work, even when another person does it. Work and play are words to describe the same thing under different conditions.
Law
Law. Laws in science are generally statements that describe or predict a relationship or behavior that consistently occurs under specific conditions.