Definition of Comparations. Meaning of Comparations. Synonyms of Comparations

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Comparations. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Comparations and, of course, Comparations synonyms and on the right images related to the word Comparations.

Definition of Comparations

Comparation
Comparation Com`pa*ra"tion, n. [L. comparatio. See Compare to get.] A making ready; provision. [Obs.]

Meaning of Comparations from wikipedia

- GoCompare.com Limited, trading as Go.Compare (formerly GoCompare from 2017 until 2022, and GoCompare.com until 2017, styled as GO.COMPARE) is a Welsh...
- Compare the Meerkat is an advertising campaign on British and Australian commercial television for comparethemarket.com, a price comparison website, part...
- Beyond Compare is a cross-platform proprietary data comparison utility. The program is able to compare files and multiple types of directories, as well...
- Nothing Compares may refer to: Nothing Compares 2 U, 1985 song written and composed by Prince, 1990 version by Sinéad O'Connor Nothing Compares (film)...
- CloudCompare is a 3D point cloud processing software (such as those obtained with a laser scanner). It can also handle triangular meshes and calibrated...
- In computer science, compare-and-swap (CAS) is an atomic instruction used in multithreading to achieve synchronization. It compares the contents of a memory...
- Output compare is the ability to trigger an output based on a timestamp in memory, without interrupting the execution of code by a processor or microcontroller...
- No Me Compares (Latin, Spanish for Do Not Compare Me) may refer to: No Me Compares (album), an album by Frankie Negrón "No Me Compares" (song), a song...
- Compare++ is an auxiliary source code file comparison tool for Microsoft Windows that can structurally compare, merge, and synchronize text files or directories...
- "Nothing Compares 2 U" is a song written by the American musician Prince for his band the Family. It first appeared on their only album, The Family (1985)...