victoria
Could you tell me the differences between “source”and “origin”?
3 de nov. de 2013 17:58
Respuestas · 4
1
Every year, the Australian states of Queensland and New South Wales have a series of rugby matches. Even non-rugby fans like me sit up and pay attention. We call it "The State of Origin". We don't call it "The State of Source".
3 de noviembre de 2013
Hi Victoria, These words are synonymous! That means they are the same thing! But to be sure, here are the two definitions from dictionary.com: Source: 1. any thing or place from which something comes, arises, or is obtained; origin: Which foods are sources of calcium? 2. the beginning or place of origin of a stream or river. 3. a book, statement, person, etc., supplying information. 4. the person or business making interest or dividend payments. 5. a manufacturer or supplier. * * Origin: 1. something from which anything arises or is derived; source; fountainhead: to follow a stream to its origin. 2. rise or derivation from a particular source: the origin of a word. 3. the first stage of existence; beginning: the origin of Quakerism in America. 4. ancestry; parentage; extraction: to be of Scottish origin. 5. Anatomy . a. the point of derivation. b. the more fixed portion of a muscle.
3 de noviembre de 2013
Hi Victoria, These words are synonymous! That means they are the same thing! But to be sure, here are the two definitions from dictionary.com: Source: 1. any thing or place from which something comes, arises, or is obtained; origin: Which foods are sources of calcium? 2. the beginning or place of origin of a stream or river. 3. a book, statement, person, etc., supplying information. 4. the person or business making interest or dividend payments. 5. a manufacturer or supplier. * * Origin: 1. something from which anything arises or is derived; source; fountainhead: to follow a stream to its origin. 2. rise or derivation from a particular source: the origin of a word. 3. the first stage of existence; beginning: the origin of Quakerism in America. 4. ancestry; parentage; extraction: to be of Scottish origin. 5. Anatomy . a. the point of derivation. b. the more fixed portion of a muscle.
3 de noviembre de 2013
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