ARTICULATE vs FLUENT: NOUN
- One of the Articulata.
- An animal of the subkingdom Articulata.
- In the doctrine of fluxions, the variable or flowing quantity in fluxions which is continually increasing or decreasing; an integral. See fluxion.
- A current of water; a stream.
- A stream; a current of water.
- A variable quantity, considered as increasing or diminishing; -- called, in the modern calculus, the function or integral.
ARTICULATE vs FLUENT: ADJECTIVE
- Expressed in articles or in separate items or particulars.
- Distinctly uttered; spoken so as to be intelligible; characterized by division into words and syllables.
- Consisting of sections united by joints; jointed.
- Having the power of speech.
- Characterized by the use of clear, expressive language.
- Expressing oneself easily in clear and effective language.
- Composed of distinct, meaningful syllables or words.
- Consisting of segments held together by joints
- Expressing yourself easily or characterized by clear expressive language
- Jointed; formed with joints; consisting of segments united by joints.
- Especially, speaking in a clear or effective manner
- Clear, effective
- Able to bend or hinge at certain points or intervals
- Easy and graceful in shape
- Expressing yourself readily, clearly, effectively
- Able to express oneself readily and effortlessly.
- Flowing effortlessly; polished.
- Flowing or moving smoothly; graceful.
- Flowing or capable of flowing; fluid.
- Smooth and unconstrained in movement
- Flowing or capable of flowing; liquid; glodding; easily moving.
- Ready in the use of words; voluble; copious; having words at command; and uttering them with facility and smoothness; ; hence, flowing; voluble; smooth; -- said of language.
- That flows; flowing, liquid.
- Able to speak a language accurately, rapidly, and confidently – in a flowing way.
ARTICULATE vs FLUENT: VERB
- To form a joint or connect by joints
- To attack a note, as by tonguing, slurring, bowing, etc.
- To bend or hinge something at intervals, or to allow or build something so that it can bend.
- To explain; to put into words; to make something specific.
- To speak clearly; to enunciate.
- To make clear or effective.
- Express or state clearly
- Put into words or an expression
- Speak, pronounce, or utter in a certain way
- Provide with a joint
- N/A
ARTICULATE vs FLUENT: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To give visible or concrete expression to (the composition of structural elements).
- To speak clearly and distinctly.
- To utter a speech sound.
- To form a joint; be jointed.
- To unite by forming a joint or joints.
- To fit together into a coherent whole; unify.
- To express in coherent verbal form.
- To utter (a speech sound) by making the necessary movements of the speech organs.
- To pronounce distinctly and carefully; enunciate.
- To utter articulate sounds; to utter the elementary sounds of a language; to enunciate; to speak distinctly.
- To treat or make terms.
- To join or be connected by articulation.
- To convert (a student's credits at one school) to credits at another school by comparing the curricula.
- N/A
ARTICULATE vs FLUENT: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To joint; to unite by means of a joint; to put together with joints or at the joints.
- To draw up or write in separate articles; to particularize; to specify.
- To form, as the elementary sounds; to utter in distinct syllables or words; to enunciate.
- To express distinctly; to give utterance to.
- N/A
ARTICULATE vs FLUENT: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Unite by forming a joint or joints
- To enter into negotiations; treat; come to or make terms.
- To utter articulate sounds; utter distinct syllables or words: as, to articulate distinctly.
- To form an articulation (with); connect (with): as, the ulna articulates with the humerus.
- Synonyms and Pronounce, Enunciate, etc. (see utter); speak.
- To formulate or set forth in articles; draw up or state under separate heads.
- To utter in distinct syllables or words.
- To utter articulately; produce after the manner of human speech.
- Jointed; segmented; articulated: as, an articulate limb; an articulate animal.
- To joint; unite by means of a joint: as, two pieces loosely articulated together. See articulation, 2.
- Specifically, having the character of the Articulata.
- Jointed by syllabic division; divided into distinct successive parts, like joints, by the alternation of opener and closer sounds, or the intervention of consonantal utterances (sometimes also of pause or hiatus) between vowel sounds: said of human speech-utterance, as distinguished from other sounds made by human organs, and from the sounds made by the lower animals.
- Hence Clear; distinct.
- Formulated or expressed in articles, or in separate particulars.
- Consisting of tens: as, articulate numbers.
- Flowing or capable of flowing; having a flowing motion, or an appearance as of flowing; changeable; not rigid.
- Proceeding from a facility of ready copious speech; marked by copiousness of speech: as, fluent utterance; a fluent style.
- In fluxions, enlarging (or diminishing) continuously, that is, by infinitesimal increments (+ or —).
- Ready in the use of words; using words with facility; voluble: as, a fluent speaker or writer.
ARTICULATE vs FLUENT: RELATED WORDS
- Speech endowed, Smooth spoken, Jointed, Word, Say, Pronounced, Phrase, Facile, Pronounce, Speaking, Formulate, Fluent, Vocalize, Enunciate, Eloquent
- Mastery, Comfortable, Bilingual, Proficient, Liquid, Smooth spoken, Silver tongued, Silver, Flowing, Fluid, Smooth, Facile, Graceful, Eloquent, Articulate
ARTICULATE vs FLUENT: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Joint, Well spoken, Speech endowed, Smooth spoken, Silver tongued, Jointed, Word, Say, Pronounced, Phrase, Facile, Speaking, Formulate, Fluent, Eloquent
- Mastery, Comfortable, Bilingual, Proficient, Liquid, Smooth spoken, Silver tongued, Silver, Flowing, Fluid, Smooth, Facile, Graceful, Eloquent, Articulate
ARTICULATE vs FLUENT: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Thanks for the opportunity to articulate these ideas!
- It was hard not to articulate the truth.
- This makes your resume look organized and articulate.
- They are now able to articulate this better.
- How could I have been louder, more articulate?
- Must be reliable, articulate and have sales experience.
- She was funny, caring articulate and loved children.
- Are they able to articulate the key takeaways?
- Stuttering, inability to articulate consonants and vowel sounds.
- It is more articulate, and discreet down low.
- Kishinevsky is fluent in Russian, French, and Hebrew.
- The FAA requires pilots be fluent in English.
- At least one person should be fluent in the national language and one should be fluent in English.
- Students also preferred FLUENT as a teaching tool used in the class because FLUENT is a commercial package used in industry.
- In addition to English, three staff members are fluent in Arabic, and many are fluent in Spanish.
- Coordinator herself is fluent in Spanishand the Program has bilingual staff membersacross the state whoare fluent in various languages.
- Translate: If you are fluent, and I mean very fluent, in a language, you can get paid to translate.
- Just for starters, he speaks fluent Hebrew and fluent Arabic, not a shabby start for an Ambassador to Israel.
- Most of the individuals the petitioner counts as fluent it merely assumes were fluent.
- These bindings determine how fluent Fluent feels to developers, but also how much Fluent can help with handling the localized return values.
ARTICULATE vs FLUENT: QUESTIONS
- Can I import studio files into articulate storyline?
- Are there any storyline templates available in articulate?
- Can I purchase Rise 360 separately from articulate?
- What bone does the condylar process articulate with?
- Does mindflash support SCORM content from articulate storyline?
- What bones articulate with the radius and metacarpals?
- Does the intermedium articulate with other wrist bones?
- Is Asaduddin Owaisi the articulate leader of AIMIM?
- How to uninstall articulate storyline 3 completely?
- What are the characteristics of articulate brachiopods?
- Do I need to enable volumetric reactions in fluent?
- How are pressure and velocity values stored in fluent?
- How do I configure entity properties using fluent API?
- Can you speak fluent English without learning idioms?
- How did Hahnemann become fluent in multiple languages?
- What are outflow boundary conditions in ANSYS FLUENT?
- Can autistic conversationalists become fluent in social skills?
- Does fluent NHibernate support Oracle managed client configuration?
- How to map inheritance hierarchies in fluent NHibernate?
- What are the signs and symptoms of mixed non-fluent aphasia (mixed non-fluent aphasia)?