Trying to use an English-English dictionary to learn English English-English dictionary confrontation which is better.
Candidates
Since it is mainly technical terms, it has been decided that Longman will lose before doing it, but ... On the contrary, there may be something interesting. .. ..
LONGMAN https://www.ldoceonline.com/
Cambridge https://dictionary.cambridge.org/
Oxford https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/
etymology https://www.etymonline.com/
■LONGMAN Absence (I often look up technical terms, so I think I tend to take a break **. I'm sorry.)
■Cambridge
a symbol or piece of text in a mathematical expression or computer instruction that can be replaced by particular pieces of information
↓
Google Translate (Mama)
A part of a mathematical expression or computer instruction symbol or text that can be replaced with specific information
■Oxford
(specialist) a symbol or piece of text that temporarily replaces something that is missing
↓
Google Translate (Mama)
Part of a symbol or text that temporarily replaces what is missing
■etymology
place-holder (n.) also placeholder, 1550s, "one who acts as a deputy for another," from place (n.) + holder (n.).
↓ Google Translate (Mama)
Placeholder (n.) Also, "another agent" from Placeholder (1550s), Place (n.) + Holder (n.).
The following done (https://arxiv.org/abs/2006.07159) Are we done with ImageNet?
■LONGMAN
somebody is done (with something) (=someone has finished doing or using something)
■Cambridge
If something is done, or you are done with it, it is finished, or you have finished doing, using it, etc.:
↓
Google Translate (Mama) <-Not good
If something is done, or if you finish it, if it finishes, or if you do it or use it, etc .:
■Oxford
finished; completed
■etymology
done past participle of do (v.); from Old English past participle gedon (a vestige of the prefix is in ado). As a past-participle adjective meaning "completed, finished, performed, accomplished" from early 15c. As a word of acceptance of a deal or wager, 1590s.
U.S. Southern use of done in phrases such as done gone (or "Octopots done got Albert!") is attested by 1827, according to OED: "a perfective auxiliary or with adverbial force in the sense 'already; completely.' " Century Dictionary writes that it was "originally causal after have or had, followed by an object infinitive ; in present use the have or had is often omitted and the infinitive turned into a preterit, leaving done as a mere preterit sign" and calls it "a characteristic of negro idiom."
To be done in "exhausted" is by 1917. Slang done for "doomed" is by 1803 (colloquial do for "ruin, damage" is from 1740). To have done it "to have been very foolish, made a mess of things" is from 1837.
↓ Google Translate (Mama)
Finished do past participle (v.); From the old English past participle gedon (prefix traces are in ado). ** The meaning of the past participle adjective is "complete, end, execute, achieve" from the beginning of 15c. ** As a term for accepting contracts or bets, the 1590s.
According to OED, use in the southern United States with phrases such as done gone (or "Octopots done got Albert!") By 1827 was "already complete, with full auxiliary or adverbial power." It is proved to mean "to". "The Century Dictionary writes that it" has a causal relationship after it originally had or had it, followed by an object infinitive. " In its current use, having or having is often omitted, the infinitive becomes a prefix and remains complete as a mere prefix. "Characteristics of black idioms."
"Exhausted" is only done until 1917. The slang term for "disastrous" is up to 1803 (the slang term for "ruin, damage" is from 1740). It wasn't until 1837 that I did "very stupid, messed up".
LONG | Camb | Oxf | Ety | Remarks | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
placeholder | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | |
done | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Nothing in particular.
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