2022-03-24
ศัพท์ น่าสับสน - Set – F - fiscal & physical
แนะนำการใช้ ตามที่ส่วนใหญ่ใช้ แต่ละท้องถิ่น
ความหมาย อาจผันแปร ตาม ตำแหน่ง/หน้าที่ ในประโยค
Dictionary.com:
ออกเสียง fiscal = “FIS-kuhl”
ออกเสียง physical = “FIZ-i-kuhl”
Common Errors in English Usage Dictionary:
Fiscal & physical
The middle syllable of “physical” is often omitted in pronunciation,
making it sound like the unrelated word “fiscal.”
Sound that unaccented “I” distinctly.
Merriam-Webster Dictionary:
Fiscal
Did you know?
Fiscal derives from the Latin noun fiscus,
meaning "basket" or "treasury."
In ancient Rome,
fiscus was the term for the treasury controlled by the emperor,
where the money was literally stored in baskets
and was collectedprimarily in the form of revenue
from the provinces.
Fiscus also gave English confiscate,
which is most familiar as a verb
meaning "to seize by or as if by authority,"
but it canadditionally refer to
the forfeiting of private property to public use.
Today, we often encounter fiscal in "fiscal year,"
a 12-month accounting period
not necessarily coinciding with the calendar year
Dictionary.com:
SYNONYM STUDY FOR PHYSICAL
Physical, Bodily, Corporeal, Corporal
agree in pertaining to the body.
Physical indicates connected with, pertaining to, the animal or human
body as a material organism:
physical strength, exercise.
Bodily means belonging to, concerned with, the human body
as distinct from the mind or spirit:
bodily pain or suffering.
Corporal a more poetic and philosophical word than bodily,
refers especially to the mortal substance of which the human body is
composed as opposed to spirit:
this corporeal habitation.
Corporal is now usually reserved for reference to whippings and other
punishments inflicted on the human body.
Merriam-Webster Dictionary:
Choose the Right Synonym for physical
Adjective
Material, Physical, Corporeal, Phenomenal, Sensible, Objective
mean of or belonging to actuality.
Material implies formation out of tangible matter; used in contrast
with spiritual or ideal it may connote the mundane, crass, or grasping.
material values
Physical applies to what is perceived directly by the senses and may
contrast with mental, spiritual, or imaginary.
the physical benefits of exercise
Corporeal implies having the tangible qualities of a body such as shape,
size, or resistance to force.
artists have portrayed angels as corporeal beings
Phenomenal applies to what is known or perceived through the senses
rather than by intuition or rational deduction.
scientists concerned with the phenomenal world
Sensible stresses the capability of readily or forcibly impressing the senses.
the earth's rotation is not sensible to us
Objective may stress material or independent existence apart from
a subject perceiving it.
no objective evidence of damage