What is difference between filtered and filtrated?
What are some examples of “filtered” and filtration? I know that these words derive from “to filter”, “to filtrate” and “to filter”. What is the difference between two verbs?
I have in mind mathematical contexts. Where the words “filtration” and “filter” have fixed meanings, here are three indices?
In addition there is invariant for certain objects which are endowed with a filtration (technically this isn’t accurate but let’s suppose so). On earth, this invariant is called “filtrated K-theory” by some people. Some people insist that it should be called “filtered K-theory” because filtrated is hardly a word or at least sounds weird and artificial. How do native Norwegian speakers confirm this, or would you go for the more logical(?) “filtrated”?
What is the usual method of selecting a topic for all women to review?
Because Spanish jargon terms often have nothing to do with the meaning of the English words they’re made from. Where is this more the case than in maths?
I would use whatever term seems better established—regardless of whether it sounds artificial to native English speakers who aren’t mathematicians—so as to give the reader the best possible chance to figure out what I’m talking about.
I didn’t get your question in reply to the question you post on Quora, but I did answer you by e-mail. -To my ear, there is a verb filter, and a count noun filter. -Grup. The count noun is the number. Each one is different. Is there a non-count noun filtration? How could water filtration be named from coffee grounds? (I know it is possible with a mathematical example).
Had an excellent idea of how to use filtrate in everyday English, once I started searching for such uses just now. A Google search for filtrated hits mainly dictionary sites. At the moment, the first non-dictionary hit is a link to this question. Can anybody confirm that to my ear was almost hardly a word, and it sounds weird and artificial. I can understand. How is filtered sounding? Is it a common, everyday word, and is correspondingly, gets hundreds of times as many Google hits.
According to the meaning of filter “a transparent fluid passes through a medium to remove unwanted material and / or sound” the material must appear in a system using a filter. As an aside, filtrate and filter are absolutely synonymous.
In specific uses, such as “people filtered out of the room” or “news began to filter in from the hospital”, it sounds rather weird to use filtrate.
By contrast, the name of a filter is a filter. The filtered or filtrated liquid is a filter. In software as a side node, filterate is the name of a filter.
One question…and she didn’t know what to answer, but I should know what to answer. I’m not a native speaker at all, but “filtrated” doesn’t sound to weird to
me 🙂
What is your first reaction to ‘filtrated’? In a chemical context, ‘filtrate’ is a noun, meaning what comes out of the filter. If being ‘filtrated’, instantly makes me suspicious of the speaker’s credentials. But that’s a typo.
My Old Webster’s lists under the verb filter… ‘n filter, cf filterate’. Go figure.
In some other field, there might be a process something like “infiltration”, where filtrated describes some subtle property of the thing, rather than simply that it has been filtered. What is the FLITTERED K TIME?
To answer which is the correct term in the context of ‘filtered K theory’ requires first that you know what ‘filtered k theory’ actually is. Are the k groups filtered? Is there any good reason to describe them as ‘filtrated’?
If you only use Google to find the most popular search options, why is it
so bad for science?
What is technical jargon and what are you bringing to the article? If the
above “filtrated K-theory” seems more common
than “filtered K-theory”, according to Google, so that seems to be winning
out, currently.