USE vs FUNCTION: NOUN
- To have no liking for.
- In liturgics, the distinctive ritual and liturgical forms and observances, collectively and singly, of a particular church, diocese, group of dioceses, or community; as, Sarum use; Aberdeen use; Anglican use; Roman use.
- That part of a sermon devoted to a practical application of the doctrine expounded.
- Interest for money; usury. [Obsolete or archaic.]
- Common occurrence; ordinary experience.
- Continued or repeated practice or employment; custom; wont; usage; habit.
- Need for employing; occasion to employ; necessity; exigency; need.
- That property of a thing (or character of a person) which renders it suitable for a purpose; adaptability to the attainment of an end; usefulness; availability; utility; serviceableness; service; convenience; help; profit: as, a thing of no use.
- The act of employing anything, or the state of being employed; employment; application; conversion to a purpose, especially a profitable purpose.
- A use, confidence, or trust in any hereditaments should be deemed and adjudged in lawful seizin, estate, and possession of the same estate that he had in use—that is, that he, instead of the nominal grantee or trustee, should become the full legal owner. This principle has been adopted by provisions, known by the same title, in the legislation of most of the United States.
- In customary practice or observance.
- Charitable uses, Charitable Uses Act.
- In law, the benefit or profit (with power to direct disposal) of property—technically of lands and tenements—in the possession of another who simply holds them for the beneficiary; the equitable ownership of lands the legal title to which is in another.
- Plural Rough iron forgings sold to be subsequently worked down into finished shapes in the forge, or heating furnace, by hammer or press. They are used also for porter-bars, or to build up larger forgings not made from an ingot.
- A liturgical form practiced in a particular church, ecclesiastical district, or community.
- The arrangement establishing the equitable right to such benefits and profits.
- The benefit or profit of lands and tenements of which the legal title is vested in another.
- Enjoyment of property, as by occupying or employing it.
- A particular custom or practice.
- Accustomed or usual procedure or practice.
- Gain or advantage; good.
- A purpose for which something is used.
- The quality of being suitable or adaptable to an end; usefulness.
- The need or occasion to use or employ something.
- The power or ability to use something.
- The permission, privilege, or benefit of using something.
- The manner of using; usage.
- The condition or fact of being used.
- The act of using something; the application or employment of something for a purpose.
- (economics) the utilization of economic goods to satisfy needs or in manufacturing
- What something is used for
- A pattern of behavior acquired through frequent repetition
- Exerting shrewd or devious influence especially for one's own advantage
- (law) the exercise of the legal right to enjoy the benefits of owning property
- A particular service
- The act of using
- The lengths of arcs relative to the sines, tangents, etc. Thus, AB is the arc whose sine is BD, and (if the length of BD is x) is written sin -1x, and so of the other lines. See Trigonometrical function (below). Other transcendental functions are the exponential functions, the elliptic functions, the gamma functions, the theta functions, etc.
- A quantity whose relation to the variable is expressed indirectly by an equation; thus, y in the equation x2 + y2 = 100 is an implicit function of x.
- A quantity directly expressed in terms of the independently varying quantity; thus, in the equations y = 6x2, y = 10 -x3, the quantity y is an explicit function of x.
- A large and important class of functions, so called because one of the forms expresses the relation of the arc of an ellipse to the straight lines connected therewith.
- See under Discontinuous.
- See Inverse trigonometrical functions (below). -- Continuous function, a quantity that has no interruption in the continuity of its real values, as the variable changes between any specified limits.
- A relation between the amount of heat given off by a source of heat, and the work which can be done by it. It is approximately equal to the mechanical equivalent of the thermal unit divided by the number expressing the temperature in degrees of the air thermometer, reckoned from its zero of expansion.
- See under Calculus.
- See under Arbitrary.
- A quantity whose connection with the variable is expressed by an equation that involves only the algebraic operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, raising to a given power, and extracting a given root; -- opposed to transcendental function.
- A public or social ceremony or gathering; a festivity or entertainment, esp. one somewhat formal.
- A religious ceremony, esp. one particularly impressive and elaborate.
- A quantity so connected with another quantity, that if any alteration be made in the latter there will be a consequent alteration in the former. Each quantity is said to be a function of the other. Thus, the circumference of a circle is a function of the diameter. If x be a symbol to which different numerical values can be assigned, such expressions as x2, 3x, Log. x, and Sin. x, are all functions of x.
- The course of action which peculiarly pertains to any public officer in church or state; the activity appropriate to any business or profession.
- The natural or assigned action of any power or faculty, as of the soul, or of the intellect; the exertion of an energy of some determinate kind.
- The appropriate action of any special organ or part of an animal or vegetable organism
- The act of executing or performing any duty, office, or calling; performance.
- Which may, for instance, be either limited or unlimited.
- Two physical quantities whose several mathematical relations to two other physical quantities are the same.
- In a generalized sense, a function which has its value unchanged by the substitution for its variable of a certain algebraic function thereof. A periodic function of the second kind is one for which this function is linear.
- A function such that the interval of the variable considered may be so divided into parts that the function is continuous, differentiable, etc., in each part.
- One of several functions related to in the same manner in which ordinary elliptic functions are related to , being merely transformed elliptic functions.
- See the adjectives.
- Hence, anything which is dependent for its value, significance, etc., upon something else.
- In mathematics, a mathematical quantity whose value depends upon the values of other quantities, called the arguments or independent variables of the function; a mathematical quantity whose changes of value depend on those of other quantities called its variables.
- Any important occasion marked by elaborate ceremonial: extended in recent use to cover social entertainments, as operas, balls, and receptions.
- An official ceremony.
- That which one is bound or which is one's business to do; business; office; duty; employment.
- Power of acting; faculty; that power of acting in a specific way which appertains to a thing by virtue of its special constitution; that mode of action or operation which is proper to any organ, faculty, office, structure, etc.
- Activity in general; action of any kind; behavior.
- Fulfilment or discharge of a set duty or requirement; exercise of a faculty or office.
- A function differing from that just defined by log/r.
- See graph.
- A rule of correspondence between two sets such that there is exactly one element in the second set assigned to each element in the first set.
- A variable so related to another that for each value assumed by one there is a value determined for the other.
- Something closely related to another thing and dependent on it for its existence, value, or significance.
- An official ceremony or a formal social occasion.
- A procedure within an application.
- The physiological activity of an organ or body part.
- A person's role or occupation.
- The action or purpose for which a person or thing is suited or employed, especially.
- A set sequence of steps, part of larger computer program
- A vaguely specified social event
- A mathematical relation such that each element of one set is associated with at least one element of another set
- A relation such that one thing is dependent on another
- A formal or official social gathering or ceremony
- What something is used for
- The actions and activities assigned to or required or expected of a person or group
USE vs FUNCTION: VERB
- Avail oneself to
- Take or consume (regularly or habitually)
- Put into service; make work or employ (something) for a particular purpose or for its inherent or natural purpose
- Use up, consume fully
- Seek or achieve an end by using to one's advantage
- Habitually do something (use only in the past tense)
- Perform duties attached to a particular office or place or function
- Serve a purpose, role, or function
- Perform as expected when applied
USE vs FUNCTION: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To take an illegal or narcotic drug, especially as a habit.
- Used in the past tense followed by to in order to indicate a former state, habitual practice, or custom.
- To partake of, especially as a habit.
- To take or consume for a purpose.
- To seek or achieve an end by means of; exploit.
- To conduct oneself toward; treat or handle.
- To avail oneself of; practice.
- To put into service or employ for a purpose.
- To execute or perform a function; to transact one's regular or appointed business.
- To deal with or overcome the challenges of everyday life.
- To have or perform a function; serve.
USE vs FUNCTION: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Put into service
- (psychology) an automatic pattern of behavior in reaction to a specific situation
- Habitually do something or be in a certain state or place (use only in the past tense)
- To accustom; habituate; render familiar by practice; inure: common in the past participle: as, soldiers used to hardships.
- To act or behave toward; treat; as, to use one well or ill.
- To practise customarily; make a practice of.
- To practise or employ, in a general way; do, exercise, etc.
- To employ; expend; consume; as, to use flour for food; to use water for irrigation.
- To employ for the attainment of some purpose or end; avail one's self of.
- (idiom) (make use of) To use for a purpose.
- (mathematics) a mathematical relation such that each element of a given set (the domain of the function) is associated with an element of another set (the range of the function)
- To perform a function; work; act; functionate; especially, in physiology, to have a function; do or be something physiologically.
USE vs FUNCTION: RELATED WORDS
- Habit, Manipulation, Utilisation, Practice, Exercise, Function, Purpose, Expend, Consumption, Utilise, Utilization, Employ, Apply, Usage, Utilize
- Go, Officiate, Run, Subprogram, Part, Office, Serve, Routine, Use, Work, Role, Procedure, Subroutine, Purpose, Operate
USE vs FUNCTION: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Role, Habit, Utilisation, Practice, Exercise, Function, Purpose, Expend, Consumption, Utilise, Utilization, Employ, Apply, Usage, Utilize
- Tasks, Functional, Mathematical function, Run, Part, Office, Serve, Routine, Use, Work, Role, Procedure, Subroutine, Purpose, Operate
USE vs FUNCTION: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Would you use an app placed on your phone to help your recovery from alcohol or substance use?
- Aims: To characterize current patterns of OAC use in LTC residents and describe the quality of warfarin use.
- Neither do I use photoshop as I use Affinity instead.
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- Limit the use of technical terms, and use active voice when writing your SOP.
- Plus use two credible identifying witnesses to use our service, certifying many more notaries.
- If exactly one function remains, that function is selected and the selection process terminates.
- This is what syntactically distinguishes it from a regular function or aggregate function.
- We know that integrating the velocity function gives us a position function.
- Refill from formula in an if function could help would the function?
- This function registers a receive packet callback function for the socket.
- We simply need to replace the ISTEXT function with ISNUMBER function.
- Function parameters are declared after the function name and inside parentheses.
- Absolute and function with multiple if function is the reference.
- Function and use a collection with this function!
- Otherwise, the nested function is an escaping function.
USE vs FUNCTION: QUESTIONS
- Why do scientists use classification systems for organisms?
- Which three sentences correctly use parallel structure?
- Should telemarketers use robots to frustrate customers?
- Which countries use ethanol for producing electricity?
- Which MMORPGs use the Caramelldansen dance animation?
- Why do companies use different depreciation methods?
- Can I use the images on Getty Images for personal use?
- Can I purchase music and use it for commercial use?
- Is it fair use to use copyrighted material without permission?
- Can I use Visual Studio Express Edition for commercial use?
- How do you call a function from a callback function?
- What is the function prototype of the 'main' function in C?
- Is a differentiable function on the real numbers a continuous function?
- What are the connections between complex function theory and harmonic function theory?
- Does Aristotle have an argument against the function of function?
- What is the unit impulse function of a delta function?
- Is customer service a sales function or an operations function?
- Does every function have an inverse that is a function?
- What is the identity function and inverse function?
- Is the Dirichlet function a Baire class 2 function?