Sunday 23 August 2015

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN

difference between morque and mortuaries.
Morgues are areas in hospitals and medical centers where the bodies of the
deceased are stored and autopsied. Mortuaries are where the bodies of the
deceased are prepared for funeral and burial.

pogrom is a riot aimed at persecution or massacre of a particular ethnic or
 religious group, usually jews while holocaust is a sacrifice that is
completely burned to ashes.

difference between massacre and pogrom
is that massacre is the intentional killing of a considerable number of
human beings, under circumstances of atrocity or cruelty, or contrary to
the norms of civilized people while pogrom is a riot aimed at persecution
or massacre of a particular ethnic or religious group, usually jews.


 A massacre kills everyon in a small group. For example. Custer's group of
men were massacred at Little Big Horn,

Genocide is the systematic extermination of a race of people. Holocaust,
although taken by the Jewish people to showcase what happened to them,
can be thought of as Genocide to the 10th power, owing to the massive
scope of the actions

A pogrom does not necessarily kill all the people, but it certainly drives
 them from your land

RIOTS AND POGROM
The first carries the
appearance of spontaneous, intergroup mass action, the second of
deliberately organized—and especially—state-supported killings and the
destruction of property of a targeted group.

Genocide and Holocaust
1.Both genocide and holocaust are the most heinous crimes against humanity that can be perpetrated.
2.They both involved the mass extermination of a group of people because of
 racial or religious characteristics.
3.Genocide is the general term for this atrocity whereas holocaust
specifically refers to Hitler’s extermination of the Jew





AS question ??
Test ur brilliance...
One murder happens in a village n police inspector askd two constbles to reach the spot n take the FIR..
As it was night n too far frm the station, two consbls didn't go there n made a fake FIR..after reading the report the inspector said that u both r suspended for making a fake report with out reachng the spot...
Question is...How the inspector find that its fake n they didn't reach there?
The FIR is written as....
When we reach the spot, the door was open and one man aged about 40 -45 was found died in a chair, one bulb is blown in the room,fan is also switchd on,one table is there infront of the dead body, and the table contains:one opend bottle of poisen ,one half filled drinkng watr bottle,one pen , one news paper was opend as pages 9-10,
One table top calendar opend as date of june 20,one 5 rupee coin,one notebook,one bed was also there in the room.
Seems that the person did suicide.
Can anybody give the right answer ??

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN

AMENITY & FACILITY
ANIMOSITY & ENEMITY
ERRORS & OMMISSION
ACCENT & DIALECT
ALPHA & OMEGA
ARTS & CRAFTS
BEAUTIFUL & BLISS
BURNS & SCALDS
HELPLESS & STRANDED
HUFFING & PUFFING
PESTLE & MORTAR, MUDDLE
BREAK & BURST(TOONA OR PHOOTNA)
CRUMPLE & RUMPLE
WRITE & SCRIBBLE
STAMMER & FUMBLE, STUMBLE
DETAILS & EXPLANATION
MUG & CRAM
CREASE & WRINKLE
TIRED & EXHAUSTED
BUMPS & JERKS
SMOKE & SPARK
SHY & TIMID
PRIDE & EXULTATION
PREVENTION & CONTROL
DISEASES & AILMENTS, DISORDERS
TREATMENT & DIAGNOSIS
SMASH & GRAB
HABITS & ROUTINES
PROTECTION & SECURITY
NULL & VOID
CONCEIT & PRIDE
INTEREST & PENCHANT
PURPOSE & OBJECTIVE, INTENT
HEAVEN & PARADISE
ECHO & RESONANCE
HOOUPS & BREAKUPS
QUEST & SEARCH
PIMP & TOUT
HUMMING AND CROONING

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN HIDE AND SKIN

Hide seems to include large and less pliable.


Skin
1. the external covering or integument of an animal body, esp. when soft and flexible.
2. such an integument stripped from the body of an animal, esp. a small animal; pelt: a beaver skin.
3. the tanned or treated pelt or hide of an animal, esp. when used in apparel and accessories; leather (usually used in combination): pigskin; calfskin.

Hide
1. the pelt or skin of one of the larger animals (cow, horse, buffalo, etc.), raw or dressed.

leather is treated and finished off. it is more smooth and has a glossier finish usually. hide is usually raw and does not have a finish to it. hide,
such as the backside of an animal rug would be an example

my sense is that the difference is that hides are thicker: cowhide, snakeskin.


This thread may already be settled, but I just ran across the same problem
and found some good concrete info. Skin if preferable in contexts outside
of hunting, tanning and the like -- hide implies these uses to an extent.
However, as the previous poster said, within the contexts of processing
animal skin, hide often refers to the skin of larger animals (which is
thicker) and skin refers to smaller ones (thin).

on the online getty art and architecture thesaurus, you can find an
extremely comprehensive list of materials with brief descriptions:

Hide (collagenous material): Note: Integument of a large animal such as a
cow or buffalo separated from the body with or without hair, whether green,
 dry, tanned, or dressed. For the integument of a small animal, use "skin." For tanned hide, use "leather."

Skin (collagenous material): Note: Integument of animals such as sheep,
calves, or goats, separated from the body, with or without hair, whether
green, dry, tanned, or dressed. For the integument of large animals use
"hide." For tanned skin, use "leather." For dried and stretched skin, use
"parchment" or "vellum."


A distinction is made among skins, hides, and pigskin. Skins come from
calves, foals, sheep, goats, and other small animals
(young camels and seals). Hides are the skins of cattle, horses, donkeys,
 camels, deer, elk, walruses, and whales. Pigskin raw materials are the
skins of domestic and wild swine. In addition to these most important
types of leather raw materials, the skins of reptiles (crocodiles, lizards,
 and snakes) and fish (wolf-fish, cod, burbot, sheatfish, dog salmon, giant
 sturgeon, and shark) are also used.

Difference

difference between rocks and pebbles
difference between bureau and board

AMENITY & FACILITY
ANIMOSITY & ENEMITY
ERRORS & OMMISSION
ACCENT & DIALECT
ALPHA & OMEGA
ARTS & CRAFTS
BEAUTIFUL & BLISS
BURNS & SCALDS
HELPLESS & STRANDED
HUFFING & PUFFING
PESTLE & MORTAR, MUDDLE
BREAK & BURST(TOONA OR PHOOTNA)
CRUMPLE & RUMPLE
WRITE & SCRIBBLE
STAMMER & FUMBLE, STUMBLE
DETAILS & EXPLANATION
MUG & CRAM
CREASE & WRINKLE
TIRED & EXHAUSTED
BUMPS & JERKS
SMOKE & SPARK
SHY & TIMID
PRIDE & EXULTATION
PREVENTION & CONTROL
DISEASES & AILMENTS, DISORDERS
TREATMENT & DIAGNOSIS
SMASH & GRAB
HABITS & ROUTINES
PROTECTION & SECURITY
NULL & VOID
CONCEIT & PRIDE
INTEREST & PENCHANT
PURPOSE & OBJECTIVE, INTENT
HEAVEN & PARADISE
ECHO & RESONANCE
HOOUPS & BREAKUPS
QUEST & SEARCH
PIMP & TOUT
HUMMING AND CROONING

Difference between solartime and sideral time


Difference between good and well


Difference between very and much


Difference between very and too


Difference between department and ministry


Difference between bureau and board


Difference between digital and analogue


Difference between pimple, zits and arian


Difference between information and communication


Difference between peril and danger


Difference between battle and war


Difference between rancour and animosity


Difference between quondom and former


Difference between quad and prison


Difference between ratio and proportion


Difference between prostitute and pimple


Difference between stone and pebble


Difference between climate and weather


Difference among bliss, happiness and beatitude


Difference among rock, stone and boulder


Difference among saliva, spit, spittle and sputum


Difference among thicket, shrubs and bush


Difference between tarn and lake


Difference between friendliness and bonhomie


Difference between labyrinth and maze


Difference between glen and pass


Difference between breeze and gate


Difference between foe and enemy


Difference between duct and flue


Difference between flick and flog


Difference between flee and elope


Difference between fin and feather


Difference between fib and lie


Difference between fatigue and fatigues


Difference between physique and figure


Difference between beautiful and handsome


Difference between discovery and invention


Difference between bank and beach


Difference between bridge and flyover


Difference between frenzy and excitement


Difference between poor and pauper


Difference between failure and fiasco


Difference between Riots and Pogrom

RIOTS AND POGROM
The first carries the appearance of spontaneous, intergroup mass action, the second of
deliberately organized—and especially—state-supported killings and the
destruction of property of a targeted group.

pogrom is a riot aimed at persecution or massacre of a particular ethnic or
 religious group, usually jews while holocaust is a sacrifice that is
completely burned to ashes.

difference between massacre and pogrom
is that massacre is the intentional killing of a considerable number of
human beings, under circumstances of atrocity or cruelty, or contrary to
the norms of civilized people while pogrom is a riot aimed at persecution
or massacre of a particular ethnic or religious group, usually jews.


 A massacre kills everyon in a small group. For example. Custer's group of
men were massacred at Little Big Horn,

Genocide is the systematic extermination of a race of people. Holocaust,
although taken by the Jewish people to showcase what happened to them,
can be thought of as Genocide to the 10th power, owing to the massive
scope of the actions

A pogrom does not necessarily kill all the people, but it certainly drives
 them from your land

RIOTS AND POGROM
The first carries the
appearance of spontaneous, intergroup mass action, the second of
deliberately organized—and especially—state-supported killings and the
destruction of property of a targeted group.

Genocide and Holocaust
1.Both genocide and holocaust are the most heinous crimes against humanity that can be perpetrated.
2.They both involved the mass extermination of a group of people because of
 racial or religious characteristics.
3.Genocide is the general term for this atrocity whereas holocaust
specifically refers to Hitler’s extermination of the Jew

Difference between Genocide and Holocaust

Genocide and Holocaust
1.Both genocide and holocaust are the most heinous crimes against humanity that can be perpetrated.
2.They both involved the mass extermination of a group of people because of
 racial or religious characteristics.
3.Genocide is the general term for this atrocity whereas holocaust
specifically refers to Hitler’s extermination of the Jew

Difference between massacre and pogrom

difference between massacre and pogrom
is that massacre is the intentional killing of a considerable number of
human beings, under circumstances of atrocity or cruelty, or contrary to
the norms of civilized people while pogrom is a riot aimed at persecution
or massacre of a particular ethnic or religious group, usually jews.

pogrom is a riot aimed at persecution or massacre of a particular ethnic or
 religious group, usually jews while holocaust is a sacrifice that is
completely burned to ashes.

Difference between labyrinths and Maze

http://www.labyrinthos.net/typology.html
In dealing with a subject as varied and complex as labyrinths and mazes, it is essential to make definitions that can be clearly explained. The first task is to clarify the difference between a labyrinth and a maze. While the terms are often used interchangeably, many historians and enthusiasts are passionate about which is which. Look up the words in a good dictionary and you will probably conclude that a maze is a labyrinth and a labyrinth is a maze...

However, in the English-speaking world it is often considered that to qualify as a maze, a design must have choices in the pathway. Clearly, this multicursal category will include many of the modern installations in entertainment parks and tourist attractions, which exist solely for the purpose of perplexing visitors, as well as the traditional hedges mazes in public parks and private gardens around the world.

Popular consensus also indicates that labyrinths have one pathway that leads inexorably from the entrance to the goal, albeit often by the most complex and winding of routes. These unicursal designs have been known as labyrinths for thousands of years, and to qualify as a labyrinth, a design should have but one path. However, the dividing line between what constitutes a maze or a labyrinth can sometimes become blurred, as mazes with single paths and labyrinths with more than one path can exist, although their intent is usually clear from their designs

Difference between morque and mortuaries

Morgues are areas in hospitals and medical centers where the bodies of the
deceased are stored and autopsied.
Mortuaries are where the bodies of the deceased are prepared for funeral and burial.

Difference between blonde and brunette

Blonde is towards the yellow, brunette is towards brown 

Blonde is a person with golden hair. 
And Brunette is the one with brown hair.

Blondes have less pigment in their hair. Brunettes have more pigment in their hair.

Difference between autopsy and postmortem

nothing,, autopsy is the american word for post mortem 
in the uk we call an autopsy a post mortem it is an examination to determin the cause of death.

Difference between Autopsy and Biopsy

A biopsy is a small tissue sample taken from a living subject for laboratory analysis. 

An autopsy is the dissection and analysis of a dead subject. 

A biopsy is a small part of a tissue or organ being removed for diagnostic testing. It is fairly common to perform a biopsy on growths or tumors. An autopsy is performed on dead bodies to determine things such as cause of death, etc.

A biopsy is done on living tissue - taking samples from People (or animals) and performing tests on them (ie test lump for Cancer) 
An Autopsy is done on something dead - person or animal - includes a full system/organ examination, including taking samples of organs and sending them to histology to determine the cause of death

they are both analytical processes, involving the school of medicine, but a autopsy is the analysis of a corpse, whereas a biopsy is the analysis of a tissue sample taken from a live organism.

a biopsy is a small part, taken from the living. 

a autopsy is a complete removal of all inside body parts, including the brain.

Biopsy is done on a living subject. Autopsy is done on a dead subject.

biopsy (or tissue sampling): a biopsy is the removal of a small piece of tissue for microscopic examination and/or culture, often to help the physician make a diagnosis. 

autopsy: an examination of a body after death to determine the cause of death or the character and extent of changes produced by disease.
 
 
 
 

Differences between a plebiscite and a referendum

It is quite common to hear the words plebiscite or referendum when the political situation of a country gets unstable and is approaching an unacceptable stage. If there are substantial objections from the subjects of the government or the opposition regarding the policies of the active government, the common process is to stage protests against the particular political party in control. Usually the party responds by holding a referendum or plebiscite. Many a times, people do not understand the difference between a referendum and a plebiscite and use the words either wrongly or as a replacement for each other. There are some major differences between the two and it depends on party to party to decide which one of them they are going to plan. The decision is usually based on what information they need and how much expression they are ready to give the common man.
In very simple words, a referendum is the phrasing which describes what the vote is about. On the other hand, a plebiscite is actually the vote itself, that is, the election for the referendum.
To begin with, a referendum is that type of a vote that is nationwide and is normally conducted in an attempt to resolve issues. There are basically two special types of referendums; the second of which is often referred to as a plebiscite. Referendum is that voting process which is staged if there is a demand from a prescribed number of citizens, for example by petition signing. This is sometimes called an initiative. Plebiscite, however, is in many cases used for those votes that were held in genuinely undemocratic conditions and in many countries gives a bad impression about the democracy situation of a country.

A referendum is a provision that permits the voters to either accept or reject a policy question or a public policy measure at a formal election. The particulars of a referendum vary in different states. It can be binding or it can be advisory. Its application may be state wide or just local. Moreover, it can be constitutional or legislative. A plebiscite is the vote by the people for a question given to them. This is more or less similar to a referendum but the term plebiscite has been recently used more commonly in context with a change in sovereignty.


A major difference between the two forms of voting on a particular issue is the initiation. Referendums are termed initiatives for a reason. Whereas the initiation of a referendum may not always involve those in power, as has been the case in citizen initiated referendums in the past, a plebiscite can only be initiated by the representative authorities. The citizens do not have the power to  initiate a plebiscite. This has an important implication. Since a plebiscite cannot be initiated by the citizens of the country, they are clearly no means of empowering the common citizens. They maybe even held in an undemocratic environment and the result ignored altogether.
Referendums cannot always be used to give further decision making power to the authorities. Plebiscites, however, are sometimes used for the sole purpose of legitimizing a particular government  decision by the people who would otherwise oppose it. This is also the reason behind the fact that although referendums might be used frequently, plebiscites are used rarely, in situations where the government is desperate that their proposal is not rejected.

Summary of differences expressed in points:

  1. Referendum-phrasing of the vote; plebiscite; the vote itself
  2. Referendum-held in a democratic environment; plebiscite-usually held in an undemocratic environment
  3. Referendum gives the option of accepting or rejecting any policy, plebiscite is the vote on a question given to them, implies a change in sovereignty
  4. Referendum can be initiated by the citizens (citizen-initiated referendums); plebiscite- only initiated by the authorities
  5. Referendums- a stronger way to get the opinion of the masses across; plebiscite- a technique used by the govt. to legitimize any policy
  6. Referendum can usually empower the people; plebiscite-usually empowers the govt. on the expense of the masses
  7. Referendum; held very commonly; plebiscite-seldom held, when the govt. is desperate to win support for a decision (in some cases by tricking the masses to think something else!)

Difference among Penury vs Indigence vs Poverty

As nouns the difference between penury and indigence

 is thatpenury is extreme want; poverty; destitution while indigence is extreme poverty or destitution.

Penury is described as  "a state of extreme poverty or destitution; "their indigence appalled him"; 
"a general state of need exists among the homeless" indigence, pauperism, pauperization, need impoverishment, poorness,
 poverty - the state of having little or no money and few or no material 
possessions mendicancy, mendicity, beggary - the state of being a beggar 

or mendicant; "they were reduced mendicancy"http://www.thefreedictionary.com/penury