contrast (verb)

  • 51counterprogram — verb a) To schedule (a broadcast on radio or television) to compete or contrast with a program broadcast simultaneously on another station. The opposing political party is deploying high profile speakers to counterprogram the convention with… …

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  • 52supervene — verb a) to follow something closely, either as a consequence or in contrast b) to supersede See Also: supervenience, supervenient …

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  • 53concatenate — verb /kənˈkætɪneɪt/ a) To join or link together, as though in a chain. , 2003: Locke, by contrast, contended that [madness] was essentially a question of intellectual delusion, the capture of the mind by false ideas concatenated into a logical… …

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  • 54make — verb Make is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑batsman, ↑company, ↑factory, ↑firm, ↑picture, ↑recipe, ↑sale Make is used with these nouns as the object: ↑accommodation, ↑accompaniment, ↑accusation, ↑ …

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  • 55collate — verb 1) the system is used to collate information Syn: collect, gather, accumulate, assemble; combine, aggregate, put together; arrange, organize 2) we must collate these two sources Syn: compare, contrast …

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  • 56correlate — verb 1) postal codes correlate with geographic location Syn: correspond to/with, match, parallel, agree with, tally with, tie in with, be consistent with, be compatible with, be consonant with, coordinate with, dovetail (with), relate to, conform …

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  • 57deviate — verb do not deviate from the original plan Syn: diverge from, digress from, drift from, stray from, veer from, swerve from; get sidetracked from, branch off from; differ from, vary from, run counter to, go in opposition to, contrast with …

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  • 58differ — verb 1) the second set of data differed from the first Syn: contrast with, be different from, be dissimilar to, be unlike, vary from, diverge from, deviate from, conflict with, run counter to, be incompatible with, be at odds with, go against,… …

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  • 59disagree — verb 1) no one was willing to disagree with him Syn: take issue with, challenge, contradict, oppose; be at variance with, be at odds with, not see eye to eye with, differ with, dissent from, be in dispute with, debate with, argue with, quarrel… …

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  • 60distinguish — verb 1) distinguishing reality from fantasy Syn: differentiate, tell apart, discriminate between, tell the difference between 2) he could distinguish shapes in the dark Syn: discern, see, perceive, make out; detect, recognize …

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