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Dana
What is the difference between* a fragment* and *a part*?
Nov 16, 2021 11:27 PM
Answers · 7
Hi Dana <3
Fragment usually refers to a "part" that has broken off something.
A part does not imply that anything was detached or broken. Instead, it's referring to one section of a whole.
I hope this helped :-)
November 17, 2021
While the two words mean almost the same thing, here is an implied difference between them. The word "fragment" implies that a smaller piece broke off roughly from a larger whole, while the word "part" simply means it belonged to a larger whole.
For instance, a bicycle part may be a pedal or handlebars. Even if a pedal falls off, it would likely fall off in one entire piece; so we would still say it was a "part" of the bike.
However, if a bicycle were hit by a car, pieces of it may break off roughly: a little piece of chain, a chunk of the seat, a chip of painted metal. These pieces would not be called "parts," because they are not in their original form. These are bike "fragments."
Both "parts" and "fragments" would be considered "pieces." The difference is that "parts" have a recognizable form or amount, while "fragments" do not.
November 17, 2021
We use different language registers for different types of writing, just as we speak differently to different people. You would not use "a part" the same way you would "a fragment", if you were writing a paper on Biology experiments, for instance. They both mean the same: a share, a part, a fragment, not the full spectrum of something, just a "slice" of it.
November 17, 2021
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Dana
Language Skills
Arabic, Chinese (Mandarin), English
Learning Language
Chinese (Mandarin), English
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