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"interchangeably" Definitions
  1. in a way that can be exchanged, especially without affecting the way in which something works
"interchangeably" Antonyms

296 Sentences With "interchangeably"

How to use interchangeably in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "interchangeably" and check conjugation/comparative form for "interchangeably". Mastering all the usages of "interchangeably" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Second, the terms STI and STD are used here interchangeably.
For Ms. Gilot, colors, text, shapes are used interchangeably — synesthetically.
Fractions are like decimals, so they can be used interchangeably.
It sounds to me like the terms are used interchangeably.
Many wrongfully believe inclusivity and intersectionality can be used interchangeably.
The PRRI survey used "reverse racism" and "reverse discrimination" interchangeably.
For these purposes, however, Pew refers to income and class interchangeably.
The terms "Red Corridor" and "the tribal belt" are used interchangeably.
In the civilian world, dependent is typically used interchangeably with child.
People tend to use the words bi, gay, and lesbian interchangeably.
LeClaire notes that this term is sometimes used interchangeably with lesbian.
The term "human trafficking" is sometimes used interchangeably with modern slavery.
There's a reason why people use the words celebrity and tastemaker interchangeably.
Receipts are printed in dollars and pounds; shoppers use the two interchangeably.
And it has been used interchangeably for other artists on internet forums.
In the directive or legislation, mention the words "wall" and "fence" interchangeably.
On the call, however, Fender more or less used the words interchangeably.
Traders often use the shorthand CNY and RMB interchangeably for the yuan.
Some people use them interchangeably, but there's more to vaping than nicotine.
The words "jail" and "prison" are often used interchangeably, but they are different.
Colloquially, these terms are used interchangeably to describe an agreement to stop fighting.
But if mass and weight are different, why are the terms used interchangeably?
He now uses the word "presidential" with a certain dread (interchangeably with "boring").
Ideology and philosophy are terms often used interchangeably by people in the media.
"Magazine" and "clip" are often used interchangeably, though they aren't the same thing.
"For years, the courts have used best interest and fiduciary interchangeably," Rostad said.
But Ethereum and ether are now used interchangeably to refer to the cryptocurrency.
Many education experts even use the terms "first gen" and "low income" interchangeably.
One common misconception is that the terms "balayage" and "ombré" can be used interchangeably.
In Tàpies's political works, like the Assassins, symbolism and allegory are used almost interchangeably.
STANCH is apparently correct, although STAUNCH has been used interchangeably for quite a while.
While "points" and "miles" are often used interchangeably, they're usually two very different things.
Many people use the two terms interchangeably, same with many companies who design them.
The artist, the spectator, and the outer world are much too interchangeably involved here.
Democrats and many on the left use race as a sword and a shield interchangeably.
Those partnerships allow these services to work interchangeably, giving their customers rides on demand internationally.
This piece uses them interchangeably and discusses myths that apply to all unwanted sexual contact.
I've used an HD 10 interchangeably with an iPad for more than a year now.
While the two terms are often used interchangeably, it's not entirely accurate to do so.
They're also not all the same, even though they're often mixed up or used interchangeably.
Marketing copy for the pills tends to use terms like productivity, efficiency, and potential interchangeably.
Instead, people use the terms vaping, JUULing, vape pens, weed pens, and e-cigarettes interchangeably.
There are many people who identify with all of these terms and use them interchangeably.
Currently, there are a variety of different definitions of "developmental disabilities" that are used interchangeably.
While today we use the words "internet" and "web" interchangeably, they actually refer to different things.
Since albums were once recorded on records, the words "album" and "record" are frequently used interchangeably.
They also pay an hourly rate to book identically outfitted rooms that can be used interchangeably.
One more thing: does this mean we can now use the terms "Budweiser" and "America" interchangeably?
Miniature Australian and American shepherds are the same thing, and many people refer to them interchangeably.
For one thing, even those who know better commonly use the words weight and mass interchangeably.
I'll use them interchangeably, often forgetting which one I'm using because the bottles look the same.
While the terms coinsurance and copays are sometimes used interchangeably, they are not the same thing.
There are two common terms (often used either interchangeably or incorrectly): basic income and minimum income.
Other terms include "barrier-free" and "inclusive," and for the most part they are used interchangeably.
Cook said that Apple has "great desktops" on the roadmap, a term he used interchangeably with iMacs.
I use she/they pronouns interchangeably, so I don't really identify as a man or a woman.
Sometimes believed to refer to Bachelor contestants and alum as opposed to fans, but often used interchangeably.
It seems the word "envoy" is used interchangeably to describe both the U.N. Envoys and the revolutionaries.
While the terms "mattress topper" and "mattress pad" are often used interchangeably, they are actually slightly different.
This is a staple of any Twin Tower lineup, and Davis and Cousins can run it interchangeably.
Now, it's not uncommon for anybody outside of the tech world to use Alphabet and Google interchangeably.
Tempeh and seitan can be used interchangeably with tofu, though you don't need to drain them first.
CLEVELAND — Sports arenas for successful franchises can sometimes seem interchangeably generic, all noise and flash and money.
In this version, everyone seems to be flailing interchangeably, in the same stale vacuum, for all eternity.
The terms "clip" and "magazine" are often used interchangeably, which annoys gun enthusiasts, as they're different devices.
"Naturism" and "nudism" are used interchangeably to describe a doctrine of communally convening outdoors in the buff.
So all of these ideas were used interchangeably, and they folded neatly into the America First movement.
The Pentagon uses the term "TBI" interchangeably with "concussion," which is classified as a mild traumatic brain injury.
People throw around words like "artificial intelligence" and "neural networks" and "deep learning" and "machine learning" almost interchangeably.
He uses them interchangeably -- and clearly feels as though Twitter allows him to speak most freely and directly.
The terms "cardiac arrest" and "heart attack" are often used interchangeably, but they are actually two distinct conditions.
Deep web This term and "dark web" or "dark net" are sometimes used interchangeably, though they shouldn't be.
At the turn of the last century, in fact, the words "hotel" and "apartment" were often used interchangeably.
Scientists have quibbled over the exact differences in the conditions, but leucism and isabellinism are sometimes used interchangeably.
These four variants, by design, have identical flight decks, so pilots can be trained to fly them interchangeably.
Software Engineer Software engineers are quite similar to software developers, and sometimes the two job titles are used interchangeably.
"People use the word interchangeably, it's the same word but for different meanings," Saksono told me over the phone.
"Though we often use these terms [ejaculation and squirting] interchangeably, they are not the same thing," Dr. Levkoff explained.
Gizmodo: We tend to use venom, poison, and toxin interchangeably in casual conversation, but they are actually quite distinct.
European populists sought to preserve their national institutions against encroaching Europeanization—a term they use sometimes interchangeably with globalization.
When people were calling for a special prosecutor in this case, they used the term interchangeably with special counsel.
Many experts use them interchangeably, toeing a controversial line between a psychiatric diagnosis and an act of premeditated violence.
DISTRIBUTED LEDGER TECHNOLOGY: A term often used interchangeably with "blockchain," although technically blockchain describes the public ledger powering bitcoin.
Much like the general public, doctors often use terms like single-payer, Medicare-for-all, and universal healthcare interchangeably.
It is important for one to find a balance and not use the word 'best friends' and 'spouse' interchangeably.
And although people often use the terms interchangeably, being cheap and being frugal are not one and the same.
In the Democratic Party, although "socialism" and "progressivism" are often used interchangeably, there is a crucial difference between them.
Getting pre-approved and getting pre-qualified for a mortgage are different, though some lenders use the terms interchangeably.
Many banks tend to use the terms "pre-qualify" and "pre-approve" interchangeably, even though they&aposre different things.
"While the logos will be used interchangeably, the classic logo will begin appearing on packaging later this year," Radley said.
The drug has also shown bioequivalence to OxyContin, which means that if approved, it could be used interchangeably with OxyContin.
Truce, cessation of hostilities, cease-fire, armistice — these terms are often used interchangeably these days, as if they were synonyms.
Many people use these terms interchangeably, but that only works because all but a few of us live on Earth.
The two names are used interchangeably in common parlance, but their use in films and songs has often raked controversy.
The terms "cleanse" and "detox" are used pretty much interchangeably, and the programs they refer to can take many forms.
But for whatever reason, Denuvo's servers viewed the demo and full game interchangeably, so the full game would load up.
First of all, we hear these two terms ["market" and "business"] used interchangeably every day, especially in the political arena.
While use of the Western calendar is common, many Japanese count years by gengo or use the two systems interchangeably.
Different income definitions: The original elephant chart relied on surveys asking about either income or consumption, which were used interchangeably.
First off, the display's uses the terms torture and interrogation interchangeably, especially in texts that are actually discussing the former.
And, except for the misstep of often using the words "Russian" and "Soviet" interchangeably, Verzemnieks is solid on her history.
Indoor or outdoor suitability: Some mats are manufactured for interior or exterior use only, while others can be used interchangeably.
Then again, parents who hit their children might not be mindful of these differing definitions, or may use them interchangeably.
However, Ruby Party is so synonymous with the Neo Romance line that the names are often used interchangeably in promotional material.
In HBO's Thrones, however, Dorne is reduced to nipple-adorned armor, forgettable characters, and a bunch of interchangeably horny, bickering individuals.
In the show, the terms warging and skinchanging are used interchangeably, although the show only presents Bran Stark as a skinchanger.
" She added that the organization was less organized in the 1990s and that "people over time use terms interchangeably and innocently.
Indeed, AI and machine learning are often confused as the same technology and used interchangeably, when in fact they're quite different.
Bellwether refers to these parts of her body as her "cunts," and uses that chill term interchangeably with their medical name.
If something is really chewy or extra Q, then it could be called QQ. Often, Q and QQ are used interchangeably.
Since Pestalozzi accepts children 8 months to 6 years old, people referring to it use the words kindergarten and Kita interchangeably.
National Observatory and Naval Observatory were used interchangeably as names for the next decade, until the naval designation was officially adopted.
It is a button up shirt sewn onto your t-shirt, or you can wear it interchangeably and have a t-shirt.
" She continued, "Some leaders deliberately use the terms refugee and migrant interchangeably, using hostile rhetoric that whips up fear against all outsiders.
Political analysts often treat these two factors interchangeably, mainly because the data usually only lets us look at one or the other.
While proptech is probably the leading term to describe this change, Business Insider and many others use it interchangeably with its synonyms.
Reds and greens were sometimes flashing up interchangeably (which was baffling), but no other color responded in this luminescent and explosive way.
The two terms are often used interchangeably, but technically, detritivores have a stomach: They ingest and digest dead matter, and decomposers don't.
They use the Sanskrit names for the poses interchangeably with the English ones, and both women-only and mixed classes are popular.
At the beginning, the chief of police, Frank Marinello, reveals worries about crime, and seems to view hippies and Hells Angels interchangeably.
The term is sometimes used interchangeablyIn my search to get pre-qualified, I realized many banks and lenders use this term interchangeably.
People often use the words poisonous and venomous interchangeably — and although they're both toxins, there's a big difference in the delivery process.
Although sociopathy, psychopathy, and antisocial personality disorder are sometimes used interchangeably, that's not a great thing to do because they aren't the same.
These suits are used interchangeably between surface and space expeditions, and the helmets look as though they limit one's vision quite a bit.
At moments during a nearly hourlong news conference, Mr. Kerry and Mr. Lavrov used the phrase "cessation of hostilities" and "cease-fire" interchangeably.
Though the terms "global" and "international" are often used interchangeably every day, the words mean very different things when it comes to advocacy.
Some insurance carriers or credit card companies use terms like "trip protection" and "trip cancellation" interchangeably, but it's not always the same thing.
Before going much further, we want to define a few terms that are often used interchangeably, but each has its own specific meaning.
Both drivers and riders pull up Uber and Lyft interchangeably on their phones, weighing which to use based on price and wait time.
AppleImage: ScreenshotApple has made the switch from two-step verification to two-factor authentication, terms that are generally used interchangeably by everyone else.
People have probably had it anyway if they've been on holiday to Greece where the word for 'lamb' and 'goat' is used interchangeably.
By using "fag" as if it meant nothing more than "dude," and using "rape" interchangeably with "take," that's what trolls were doing online.
Often, the word "surreal" is used interchangeably with "trippy" when discussing the show's central qualities—its absurdity, its fantastical elements, its apparent randomness.
For example, if your family speaks English and German, you can ask the Google Assistant questions in either of those two languages interchangeably.
Calling herself a medium, a psychic and a spiritualist interchangeably, Linda (Randy Danson) knows all about that need: She basically lives off it.
Even at the height of World War II, instruction in "posture" and "bearing," terms often used interchangeably, received earnest coverage in Army manuals.
But I don't like the term decriminalization, because it's used interchangeably with legalization — even sometimes by the president and often by the media.
He criticized the courts for using the terms desegregation and integration interchangeably, seeming to side with the very Supreme Court decision Warren wrote against.
"At least 15 years ago, when people had conversations about dark matter, they used the words 'dark matter' and 'WIMPs' interchangeably," Hooper told Gizmodo.
Netgear's original Orbi will stay on sale, and all three of its Orbi units will be able to be used interchangeably within one system.
The reality for blacks folks in America is freedom is far off and that's why I don't agree with using freedom and liberation interchangeably.
There is no internationally established threshold for declaring a leptospirosis "outbreak" or "epidemic," according to epidemiologists, many of whom use those terms almost interchangeably.
DG: And yet these terms have been used interchangeably when in fact there's no profit to be made in a perfect market, is there?
The terms are often used interchangeably, but income (the money a person makes) and wealth (the total value of one's assets) aren't the same.
Continue the conversation with the same set of professionals being asked about the future and you might notice some use "apps" and "mobile" interchangeably.
While I prefer "they" as a pronoun, I still use "she" interchangeably depending on how safe or comfortable I feel in a particular space.
You can use the sausages almost interchangeably, but when I can find chouriço in the markets I haunt, I prefer it: fatty and rich.
For decades, the Dutch government used "Holland" and "the Netherlands" interchangeably to describe the country known for its iconic canals, tulip fields and windmills.
So, someone could say they got an "Academy of Television Arts & Sciences award" instead, similar to how "Oscar" and "Academy Award" are used interchangeably.
Most modern cameras can use SD, SDHC, or SDXC interchangeably, but if you have an older camera, that may not always be the case.
I chose a baseball-related definition in my clue hoping to of avoid confusion, but I have found examples of the phrases used interchangeably.
That is, AirPods could be worn "interchangeably," and determine what to play, when to stop, and other features, based on its proximity to its human.
They're often used interchangeably, but the purpose is universal: using products or undergoing procedures to reduce the amount of melanin, or pigment, in the skin.
American pundits have often used "deep state" interchangeably with the bureaucracies of the military and spy agencies, especially those bits that leak against the government.
The two are equally common in the crossword puzzle and seem to be used interchangeably, but a hall seems much more permanent than a tent.
"I think surgeons use them interchangeably," he says, adding that the link between textured implants and a higher risk for ALCL is still not confirmed.
Although the Western calendar has become more widespread in Japan, many people here count years in terms of gengo or use the two systems interchangeably.
Board member and products chief Bernd Leukert said the company would let customers interchangeably run their software on SAP datacenters or on public cloud services.
"I wish that I had the guts to stand up for gay rights," she said wistfully (the contestants often use male and female pronouns interchangeably).
There are pyramids that alternate between the Aztec, Mayan and Egyptian styles, adorned with patterns that use each of the cultural motifs of each interchangeably.
If we use "comprise" interchangeably for "compose", or "begs the question" for "prompts the question" we lose the shades of meaning which help intelligent discourse.
Yet Gropius used the expression "cathedral of future freedom" interchangeably with his more prosaic phrase "unitary work of art" when promoting his total-artwork ideal.
The phrase "Lunar New Year" is sometimes used interchangeably with "Chinese New Year," but there are variations in how the holiday is celebrated around Asia.
"Nerve center" is a unique McKinsey term, but he said it can be used interchangeably when referring to company war rooms and crisis response teams. 
But, again, in that doomed campaign you can detect the budding seeds of today's nationwide voter-suppression movement, which targets both blacks and Latinos, often interchangeably.
Positioned between renderings, the permeable material's function as a layer that is used interchangeably as internal lining and external cladding manifests in literal — though alternative — terms.
I.P.) "Azor Ahai," or The Prince That Was Promised (these terms seem to be used interchangeably in the show, and we're treating them as such here).
A benefit of the aircraft was that pilots could fly both the A320 and A321 interchangeably due to a shared type rating for A320 family aircraft.
You can use these interchangeably to some degree, but for all sorts of reasons, it's best to use the allotted wattage for the device category intended.
That's because animals occupy a fraught and complex space in real-life human culture where they can be categorized, sometimes interchangeably, as both friends and food.
The terms "fundamentalist" and "evangelical" are used interchangeably now, but they have discrete origins and in the 1950s a discernible ideological gulf separated the two camps.
"It does vary quite a bit depending on the school, and they do tend to use the two terms 'essays' and 'personal statement' interchangeably," Coward said.
Puerto Ricans often cruise to the American or British Virgin Islands, known interchangeably here as "las islas," to enjoy their crystalline beaches or for fishing competitions.
Early on he uses the descriptions "cops" and constables interchangeably, but then explains that the term "cop" was born later, when police officers got copper badges.
NATO uses ISIL or Daesh in its official documents but the alliance also uses all three terms interchangeably for the current time, according to spokeswoman Daniele Riggio.
" The latter, dubbed the Day 1 Academies Fund—the website uses both "1" and "One" interchangeably in its nomenclature—still invites readers to "stay tuned for updates.
Unlike his other characters that take on a singular reading, women in Buck's body of work interchangeably seem to affirm and usurp the oppressive acts he depicts.
In grappling with this question after Charlottesville, the Associated Press offered this clarification for its own coverage: For many people the terms can be used almost interchangeably.
While sometimes used interchangeably, this technically differs from a bear market, which is a downturn of 20 percent or more over a two-month period or more.
We're taking a hard look at how we determine interchangeability so that we can make determinations that biosimilars can be used interchangeably with the brand of drugs.
A truly border-long barrier would require at least another 1,200 miles of fresh "wall," which is often used interchangeably with "fence" by officials, smugglers, and migrants.
But reduced to essential pieces — great outerwear, especially, like oversized macs and Harrington jackets, shown on men and women interchangeably — that fresh look made Burberry look fresh.
People use those terms "preemptive" and "preventative" interchangeably but you're saying there's a distinction and it really matters in terms of justifications for the use of force.
In fact, Trump told aides that Haspel's support for "torture" or "waterboarding" (Trump uses these words interchangeably in his private conversations) was an asset, not a liability.
Yes, I know it's a musical and a suspension of disbelief is necessary, but it's weird and jarring to hear them make cat and human sounds interchangeably.
The terms "vegan" and "plant-based" are often used interchangeably, but there's a growing effort to define just what it means to follow a plant-based lifestyle.
No need to fiddle with with the settings: Google's smart assistant and Home speaker are now bilingual, allowing users to issue commands in two different languages interchangeably.
Heart disease is technically a subset of cardiovascular disease, but the two are often used interchangeably to refer to a handful of conditions that affect the heart.
Despite the fact that we use the name interchangeably with the most bastardized corner-store sparkling white wines imaginable, Champagne is still the gift that keeps on giving.
Though the two terms are often used interchangeably in Nigeria, Afrobeat more precisely refers to a genre with soul and jazz influences that became popular in the 1970s.
The word "volatility," the tendency of an asset to bounce around in price, is often used interchangeably with the word "risk" in financial literature, and with good reason.
But while the two terms are often used interchangeably in the media — and, more confusingly, by members of Congress who should know better — they're not quite the same thing.
Update, May 17th at 2:45PM ET: Although they have been used interchangeably, Grand Central Station is more commonly used to refer to the post office across the street.
Exile and immigration, terms often used interchangeably, are dissimilar in one key aspect: Exile, brought on by inevitability and not by choice, lacks the agency so essential to immigration.
But this season's apparent Jekyll-and-Hyde dynamic asks viewers to accept two different actors playing the same person interchangeably, from moment to moment, and mostly pulls it off.
Pre-qualification and pre-approval are used interchangeably, but they shouldn&apost beThese two terms are truly different, according to Andy Taylor, general manager of mortgages at Credit Karma.
Ask any Digital Nomad: You can interchangeably move from one country to the next and feel, if not at home, then safe enough to venture out for a soft drink.
Referred to as a "multi-factor fusion engine" by Synaptics, the system would allow facial or fingerprint logins to be used interchangeably, or combined for an even more robust login.
Absolutely. Throughout history, people have used the words "hung over" and "drunk" interchangeably, like in sea shanties where they sing about a drunk sailor and it's obviously he's hung over.
But given that there are about 310 species of pigeons and doves (the terms are often used interchangeably), it's hard to know exactly what kind of pigeon this really is.
These positions will work for people of all genders — don't forget that a strap-on dildo, fingers, and a penis can be used by a "giver" interchangeably to penetrate someone.
AI and machine learning (terms that are often used interchangeably) involve computers crunching vast quantities of data to find patterns and make predictions without being explicitly programmed to do so.
According to records from the Dictionary of American Regional English, the phrase "carry-in dinner" has been used interchangeably with "potluck" in some Midwestern states for more than a century. 
In his new film Death of a Nation, right-wing polemicist Dinesh D'Souza argues that modern "liberals" and leftists (he uses the terms interchangeably) have a strong affinity with Nazism.
For Dyson, Ted Cruz is interchangeably Roose Bolton or Walder Frey, characters who have both violated the norms of their society, or the rules by which the game is played.
In America, it is now used interchangeably with "person of color" and "nonwhite," and while there are those who will grumble, "minority" just isn't that much of a feather-ruffler.
Although people often use the terms interchangeably, sun poisoning and severe sunburn are actually very different skin conditions, says Shari Lipner, MD, PhD, assistant professor of dermatology at Weill Cornell Medicine.
Whenever the integrity of a bone is compromised, whether by a hairline crack or an all-out break, doctors call it a fracture, and the two terms can be used interchangeably.
But by 2013, enough people were using it interchangeably with "metaphorically" that even leading grammar pedants threw up their hands (literally?), and the Merriam-Webster and Cambridge dictionaries expanded their definitions.
Deep learning is often mentioned interchangeably together with artificial/deep neural networks, which can be viewed as a biologically inspired programming paradigm that enables a computer to learn from observational data.
" Though the two words are sometimes used interchangeably, an "idea" is defined as "a thought or suggestion as to a possible course of action," while a concept is "an abstract idea.
Printed in big black Hebrew characters on a rectangle of brown paper was the Yiddish word "toyre" (Torah), which is used almost interchangeably in this translation with the word "traditsye" (tradition).
Constant exposure to people who see race as a fluid concept — who define themselves as Asian, Hawaiian, black or white interchangeably — makes rigid thinking about race harder to maintain, she speculates.
Over 80 percent of Americans agree that men and women are fundamentally equal, but that broad acceptance of our equality doesn't mean that we should be treated interchangeably in every circumstance.
But while the suite of options might be vast, it is relatively intuitive to use them interchangeably, by pushing a button on the steering wheel or through a tap on the screen.
"It's very difficult for us, without access to their data ... to be able to understand how the Russians used these platforms interchangeably and what the sum total of this was," Schiff said.
I couldn't get S3R on Instagram and the full name, Sermon 3 Recordings was too long, so I just called it Sermon 3 and now they both work interchangeably with each other.
Dig a little deeper, though, and you find that Oxfam is using the term "cash reserves" interchangeably with the amount of permanently reinvested earnings (PREs) companies report on their federal disclosure forms.
Not only that, but it provided fast, even heat throughout, and the walls of the pan are just high enough that you can use it as a saucepan and saute pan interchangeably.
Using the word almost interchangeably is confusing, not to mention unfair to American neoliberals, who may have gone overboard on financial deregulation in the 1990s but have staunchly opposed Republican austerity measures.
Inman scored early against Tampa in Week 13 but only caught one other pass; still, he and Tyrell Williams have taken over Philip Rivers' top two receiving spots and they're used interchangeably.
Mr. Jarrell, 59, is of the generation of European composers who grew up in a musical landscape dominated by Pierre Boulez and created work that largely — and often interchangeably — echoed his style.
Some people confuse Album of the Year with Record of the Year, since albums used to be on physical records and, thus, the two terms are often used interchangeably in common parlance.
Additionally, they often function interchangeably with captioning to help viewers (including those who are deaf or hard of hearing) more clearly understand dialogue in their native language than reading subtitles alone would.
Now, Roy Moore is associated with a different, though no less politically loaded school of thought: Christian Reconstructionism (often used interchangeably with Dominionism), which believes in a global theocracy governed by Mosaic Law.
Morrow uses the terms country and Americana interchangeably, and the sounds serve as equally varying musical themes on Concrete and Mud, which moves from classic country, to psych ballads, and white boy funk.
Both Mary and Irene are arguably interchangeably the woman who showed up long enough to fall in love with and reflect important truths to our heroes about themselves, before conveniently exiting stage right.
In addition to Mekas's numerous films (and cofounding the Anthology Film Archives in New York), he has published over 20 volumes of written work; he often uses the terms "filmmaker" and "poet" interchangeably.
Like many others, she uses the term "Dinka" and "government soldiers" interchangeably, a worrying sign the war is being defined by ethnic polarization that could fuel violence and retaliatory attacks against entire communities.
Even though people use the terms "congenital heart defect" and "congenital heart disease" interchangeably, a CHD is not actually a disease — it just refers to an anatomical ailment or abnormality, according to the AHA.
Although Rivero and Juan Nicasio are being used somewhat interchangeably as the closer, depending on the situation, it certainly appears the Rivero is the front-runner for that job since Tony Watson got demoted.
Although Gullah and Geechee — terms whose origins have been much debated and may trace to specific African tribes or words — are often used interchangeably these days, Ms. Bailey always stressed that she was Geechee.
The deal gives BP a role in Brazil's booming ethanol market ahead of a new federal policy next year aimed at boosting use of biofuels, which are used interchangeably with gasoline in Brazilian passenger cars.
Funny obits bring new life to a dying art Today, "death notice" and "obituary" are used interchangeably as paid announcements and editorial obituaries become harder to tell apart, especially in the United States and Canada.
I use these terms interchangeably because I am anti-label and want as large a territory as possible when exploring visionary fiction and art that asserts a future and/or an alternative for black people.
NVMe and M.2 often get used interchangeably, because they're so often present on the same SSD, but you need both in a drive (and have a motherboard that supports both) for the best performance.
On his website, where he repeatedly states "Latin, Black, and White must unite," he uses Arab and Muslim interchangeably with "East Indian" in describing the people he believes represent a threat to these three groups.
The deal gives BP a key role in Brazil's booming ethanol market ahead of a new federal policy next year aimed at boosting use of biofuels, which are used interchangeably with gasoline in Brazilian passenger cars.
Here in the US, notarios and immigration consultants (the terms are used interchangeably) can help translate forms and submit completed forms on someone's behalf but, under the law, are not permitted to offer any legal advice.
The media consistently uses the terms racists, fascist, and nationalists together and interchangeably, in an overt attempt to confuse and conflate abhorrent beliefs with policies that recognize America's unique, national interests and embody legitimate patriotic pride.
Botox and its competitors — including Dysport, sold by the Nestlé subsidiary Galderma, and Xeomin, sold by Merz — are used virtually interchangeably by doctors, who buy the products from the companies and charge patients for the procedures.
The two currencies were used so interchangeably in daily life that it was common to pay for a meal or taxi in one currency and receive change in the other, or in a combination of both.
Image: KoboWhen it comes to e-readers, Amazon's Kindles have become so dominant that the brand often gets used interchangeably with the generic term, much like you see with Kleenex for tissues and Frisbees for flying discs.
Yet, in covering the recent Ahvaz protests, most Western media reports did not attribute any significance to the fact that the region is populated by Iran's ethnic Arab minority, often using the words "Persian" and "Iranian" interchangeably.
If the distinction leaves you baffled, rest assured that you're not alone — I've spent most of my life confused about it — and for our purposes here, feel free to think of the terms more or less interchangeably.
These phrases are often used interchangeably, but they refer to slightly different things: All of these might be called for during an outbreak, to varying degrees of effectiveness, and result in varying degrees of hardship for individuals.
Although we might sometimes use rational and reasonable interchangeably, the study shows that people generally associate the former with the cold hard logic of self-interest and the latter with socially conscious traits like kindness or cooperativeness.
The story of their intense, intimate friendship and its rapid dissolution at the hands of Raffin (then a deacon) forms, along with accounts of her two journeys to Reykjavik, one of three timelines that are explored interchangeably.
Good. Now we can clear up confusion on another Grammy category: Album of the Year: Lots of people confuse this category with Record of the Year, because we like to use the words "record" and "album" interchangeably.
The report delves into more specifics related to happiness at work, analyzing self-reported measures of happiness and well being (which are distinct concepts treated somewhat interchangeably in this report) that represent 98 percent of the global population.
There was a long sequence of some sort of makeup contest featuring The New Celebrity Apprentice contestants such as Boy George, YouTuber Carrie Keagan, Jon Lovitz, Snookie, real housewife Kyle Richards and a dozen other interchangeably famous people.
Familia is still expected to receive the bulk of the save chances, but Callaway said he intended to use him, Anthony Swarzak, Jerry Blevins and A. J. Ramos, also a former All-Star closer, interchangeably based on matchups.
Playwright George Bernard Shaw, an opponent of the war, popularized the once-uncommon phrase "cannon fodder," which suggested that soldiers of all nations had been impersonally requisitioned to feed the guns or duped into enlisting by interchangeably imperialist rulers.
With that in place, the Max could share the same type of rating as the 737NG, and pilots could fly the two families of 737 interchangeably — meaning airlines could have one pool of pilots capable of flying both planes.
For the last 20 years, Lebanon has interchangeably used US dollars and the Lebanon pound thanks to a central bank policy that set the exchanged rate at about 1,500 pounds to the dollar, according to The New York Times.
It didn't actually have to be this good, but with a voice that spirals and purrs interchangeably, features like Missy Elliott, and pop songs as solid as "breathin'" and "everytime," Ariana Grande and Sweetener have all the credentials necessary.
Modern-day Macs make use of a new file storage system called APFS (Apple File System), and it has its own alternative to partitions in the form of volumes (the two terms are sometimes used interchangeably, which can get confusing).
The words sunscreen and sunblock are used interchangeably, but sunscreen generally refers to lotion that protects your skin by a "chemical" process, while sunblock creates a "physical" barrier, usually with titanium and zinc particles, to literally block or reflect UV rays.
Visual novels are often interchangeably referred to as "dating sims," which are a very similar form of Japanese game that emphasizes your dating skills and allows you to rack up points and social clout as you move through the dating adventure.
It claims that Google (and Facebook, which the film refers to almost interchangeably) deliberately manipulates its service to suppress conservative users and ideas, and — more ambitiously — that Google tweaked its search algorithm to swing the 2016 election in Hillary Clinton's favor.
Microsoft Store and Xbox gift card (don't sweat on which to buy, they can be used for Xbox or PC purchases interchangeably) Whether it's done on a phone or game console, gaming is increasingly leaning on subscriptions or microtransactions (i.e.
Image: G. Pérez-Díaz/IACPSR J2215+5135, as the newly described neutron star is called, is what astronomers call a "redback" pulsar (the terms "neutron star" and "pulsar" are often used interchangeably, though technically speaking pulsars only describe rapidly rotating neutron stars).
On both the left and the right, the terms "class war" and "class warfare" get used almost interchangeably with the Marxist concept of "class struggle," which was just Karl Marx's way of talking about the eternal political fight facing workers under capitalism.
The concepts, she says, have been used so interchangeably that they sometimes lose meaning, and that requires brands to be more specific in addressing things like access to opportunity, representation in media and pop culture, and women's agency over their own bodies.
England has 85 percent of the United Kingdom's population and its dominance is such that in the past "British" and "English" were often used interchangeably by many English people as well as foreigners - although not in the UK's three other constituent parts.
Our richest experiences will come not from treating print and audio interchangeably, but from understanding the differences between them and figuring out how to use them to our advantage — all in the service of hearing what writers are actually trying to tell us.
It makes little sense for the city to regulate the old and new guard of for-hire cars differently when many New Yorkers use them interchangeably — as do some drivers, who have been known to switch between traditional cabs and app-based services.
D'Souza's latest plea-for-attention title isn't false advertising: His book really does attempt to pin just about every crime in our nation's history, plus certain famous German crimes as well, on the left and Democrats (categories used interchangeably and ahistorically throughout).
The tendency of many people on the autism spectrum to wander can lead to encounters with the police, but Wendy Fournier, president of the National Autism Association, said there are two distinct categories, wandering and elopement, though they are often used interchangeably.
Though some people, including food bloggers, may use the terms "plant-based" and "vegan" interchangeably, plant-based is an "umbrella term" and does not equate to being vegan, added Kimberlain, who is also a national spokesperson for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.
Each of Kaufman's films exists in a kind of recursive postmodern loop, as a hall of mirrors and metaphor, in which art and life intermingle almost interchangeably and the artifice of cinema becomes a way to portray the artifice of real life.
However, since the terms have been used loosely and interchangeably by some companies, this may not describe the final functionality of the device, particularly since most of the demonstration videos from Magic Leap have focused on what appears to be kind of augmented reality.
I think down the road, we'd like to integrate with customers' lives where when it comes either to buying a car or saying "Hey, I want to take that ride sharing service" or whatever, "Hey, let's take the Ford" and use it almost interchangeably.
O'Toole might quibble with my using "United Kingdom" and "Great Britain" interchangeably, since the United Kingdom, unlike Great Britain, encompasses Northern Ireland, whose border with the Republic of Ireland (a member in good standing of the European Union) has been a major Brexit sticking point.
A survey of more than 10,700 people from the University of Wisconsin-Madison found that while many respondents used both words interchangeably, the word "frosting" was the most common response, and popular on the West Coast, in the Northeast, and in most of the Midwest.  
Now, advances in manufacturing processes have made it possible for watchmakers to use sapphire crystal (or sapphire glass — the terms are used interchangeably in the industry) as a stand-alone, virtually scratch-proof component; a prominent decorative element, or to protect the watch itself.
"I have repeatedly urged the social media companies to share data among themselves and prepare a joint report for the committee on how these platforms were used interchangeably to reinforce the Russian messages, and I continue to hope that they will do so," he added.
Many analyses of climate change — including the report Vice based its article on — treat the deaths of a billion people and the extinction of humanity as pretty similar outcomes, interchangeably using descriptions of catastrophes that would kill hundreds of millions and catastrophes that'd kill us all.
The Su-47 Berkut, sometimes also referred to as the "Golden Eagle" and interchangeably the "S-32" or "S-37" and also by its NATO codename "Firkin," was a one-off aircraft designed primarily to test the viability of several new flight control and overall design characteristics.
And those problems really are treated more or less interchangeably: as secrets each character hides until their showcase episode arrives, only to reveal the truth in a tear-streaked monologue that leaves Clay staring, mouth agape, at how little he understands the pain of his friends.
When I asked Dr. Richard Brown, a clinical psychiatrist and an early advocate of Depakote, why I would be given two different kinds of the drug interchangeably, he said that historically it has been the pharmaceutical companies themselves that educate doctors and pharmacists on new medications.
The idea was the Max would fly like a 737 NG, and pilots would be able to fly both planes interchangeably with only a supplemental learning course instead of acquiring a new type rating to fly the aircraft that would require a full-fledged training regimen.
We asked Alan Rappeport, an economic policy reporter who covered the tax cut blueprint, whether he could clarify which term is correct: They are often used interchangeably and the Trump proposal actually called for a repeal of the "death tax," which usually refers to the estate tax.
The Old English usage was complimentary, slick and sleek interchangeably referring to the smooth glossy pelt of a healthy animal, then a plump and bright-eyed person; later in its evolution an oily sheen developed and the word began to describe someone more unctuous, servile or obsequious.
He didn't just use "the African Americans" interchangeably with "the inner city" — he also went as far as to express enthusiasm for reviving stop and frisk, the New York City policing program that a judge expressly stated discriminated against black and Latino residents, in violation of their constitutional rights.
You may wonder why race or ethnicity isn't a category — IBM's John R. Smith, who led the creation of the set, explained in an email to me: Ethnicity and race are often used interchangeably, although the first is more related to culture and the second is related to biology.
" Indeed, utopia's name has become so tarnished that it has recently been used almost interchangeably with its evil twin, dystopia—a word coined by John Stuart Mill, three and a half centuries after the publication of More's book, to describe a society that was "too bad to be practicable.
Sony and Microsoft are using the same base GPU architectureWe know both consoles are based on the RDNA architecture produced by AMD (RDNA is frequently used interchangeably with its internal codename, Navi, however, AMD has asked that we use RDNA to refer to the architecture and Navi to actual GPUs).2.
Reared to speak French, English and German interchangeably and encouraged to read widely in the classics by his closely attentive father, George emigrated with his family to New York City in 22018 and attended the Lycée Francais, becoming a naturalized citizen in 1944 and receiving his French baccalaureate in 1947.
Meet the most luxurious (and cruelty-free, to boot) lip product to ever grace our makeup bags: The sleek gold applicator can be used interchangeably with a wide range of colors, including this gorgeous cool-toned nude, which is the perfect lighter shade for flattering darker skin tones without washing them out.
Spearphishing Phishing and spearphishing are often used interchangeably, but the latter is a more tailored, targeted form of phishing (see above), where hackers try to trick victims into clicking on malicious links or attachments pretending to be a close acquaintance, rather than a more generic sender, such as a social network or corporation.
A video of "stars" on Grapevine's roster, all of whom had interchangeably beachy waves—with the exception of the African-American influencer, until it was revealed the video she created was about turning her natural curls into beachy waves—twirled for the camera and showed off the merchandise (cosmetics, hand balm, disposable clothing).
In a recent study that looked at how anti-abortion rhetoric had seeped into these prosecutions, Jocelyn Viterna, a Harvard sociologist, and José Santos Guardado Bautista, a lawyer in the Salvadoran attorney general's office, found that the words "abortion" and "homicide" were used interchangeably by news reports and high-ranking legal officials.
In the new pilot, Benioff and Weiss were smarter about introducing the White WalkersAnother change came with the description of Will's discovery of the wildling corpses and the White Walkers themselves, referred to as "Others" in the first script but White Walkers in the final version (Martin uses these terms interchangeably in the books).
"They kind of mix things up, for example, using 'impulsive' and 'compulsive' interchangeably," said Hudak, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine in Pennsylvania and medical director of the Obsessive Compulsive Disorders Outpatient Program at the at Western Psychiatric Hospital at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center who wasn't involved in the study.
Before we get into the nuts and bolts of the Honda 21-inch Variable Speed 4-in-1 Gas Walk Behind Self Propelled Lawn Mower, we should point out that the model numbers HRX217VKA and HRX5993K5VKA are used interchangeably by Honda to refer to this lawn mower, and there do not appear to be any differences between the two.

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