Assets vs. Web — What's the Difference?
Difference Between Assets and Web
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Compare with Definitions
Assets
A useful or valuable quality, person, or thing; an advantage or resource
Proved herself an asset to the company.
Web
A woven fabric, especially one on a loom or just removed from it.
Assets
A valuable item that is owned.
Web
The structural part of cloth.
Assets
A spy working in their own country and controlled by a foreign power or an enemy.
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Web
A latticed or woven structure
A web of palm branches formed the roof of the hut.
Assets
(Accounting) The entries on a balance sheet showing all properties, both tangible and intangible, and claims against others that may be applied to cover the liabilities of a person or business. Assets can include cash, stock, inventories, property rights, and goodwill.
Web
A structure of delicate, threadlike filaments characteristically spun by spiders or certain insect larvae.
Assets
The entire property owned by a person, especially a bankrupt, that can be used to settle debts.
Web
Something intricately contrived, especially something that ensnares or entangles
Caught in a web of lies.
Assets
Plural of asset
Web
A complex, interconnected structure or arrangement
A web of telephone wires.
Assets
(finance) Any property or object of value that one possesses, usually considered as applicable to the payment of one's debts.
Web
Often Web The World Wide Web.
Assets
(accounting) The left side of a balance sheet.
Web
A radio or television network.
Assets
(legal) Sufficient estate; property sufficient in the hands of an executor or heir to pay the debts or legacies of the testator or ancestor to satisfy claims against it.
Web
A membrane or fold of skin connecting the toes, as of certain amphibians, birds, and mammals.
Assets
Any goods or property properly available for the payment of a bankrupt's or a deceased person's obligations or debts.
Web
The barbs on each side of the shaft of a bird's feather; a vane.
Assets
Private parts; a woman's breasts or buttocks, or a man's genitalia.
Web
(Baseball) A piece of leather or leather mesh that fills the space between the thumb and forefinger of a baseball glove. Also called trap1, webbing.
Assets
Property of a deceased person, subject by law to the payment of his debts and legacies; - called assets because sufficient to render the executor or administrator liable to the creditors and legatees, so far as such goods or estate may extend.
Web
(Architecture) A space or compartment between the ribs or groins of a vault. Also called cell.
Assets
The entire property of all sorts, belonging to a person, a corporation, or an estate; as, the assets of a merchant or a trading association; - opposed to liabilities.
Web
A metal sheet or plate connecting the heavier sections, ribs, or flanges of a structural element.
Assets
Anything of material value or usefulness
Web
A thin metal plate or strip, as the bit of a key or the blade of a saw.
Web
A large continuous roll of paper, such as newsprint, either in the process of manufacture or as it is fed into a web press.
Web
To provide with a web.
Web
To cover or envelop with a web.
Web
To ensnare in a web.
Web
The silken structure which a spider builds using silk secreted from the spinnerets at the caudal tip of its abdomen; a spiderweb.
The sunlight glistened in the dew on the web.
Web
(by extension) Any interconnected set of persons, places, or things, which, when diagrammed, resembles a spider's web.
Web
(baseball) The part of a baseball mitt between the forefinger and thumb, the webbing.
He caught the ball in the web.
Web
A latticed or woven structure.
The gazebo’s roof was a web made of thin strips of wood.
Web
(usually with "spin", "weave", or similar verbs) A tall tale with more complexity than a myth or legend.
Careful—she knows how to spin a good web, but don't lean too hard on what she says.
Web
A plot or scheme.
Web
The interconnection between flanges in structural members, increasing the effective lever arm and so the load capacity of the member.
Web
(rail transport) The thinner vertical section of a railway rail between the top (head) and bottom (foot) of the rail.
Web
A fold of tissue connecting the toes of certain birds, or of other animals.
Web
The series of barbs implanted on each side of the shaft of a feather, whether stiff and united together by barbules, as in ordinary feathers, or soft and separate, as in downy feathers.
Web
(manufacturing) A continuous strip of material carried by rollers during processing.
Web
(lithography) A long sheet of paper which is fed from a roll into a printing press, as opposed to individual sheets of paper.
Web
(dated) A band of webbing used to regulate the extension of the hood of a carriage.
Web
A thin metal sheet, plate, or strip, as of lead.
Web
The blade of a sword.
Web
The blade of a saw.
Web
The thin, sharp part of a colter.
Web
The bit of a key.
Web
A major broadcasting network.
Web
(architecture) A section of a groin vault, separated by ribs. en
Web
A cataract of the eye.
Web
Senseid|en|the Web}} {{alternative case form of Web: the World Wide Web.
I found it on the web.
Let me search the web for that.
Web
(intransitive) To construct or form a web.
Web
(transitive) To cover with a web or network.
Web
(transitive) To ensnare or entangle.
Web
(transitive) To provide with a web.
Web
To weave.
Web
A weaver.
Web
That which is woven; a texture; textile fabric; esp., something woven in a loom.
Penelope, for her Ulysses' sake,Devised a web her wooers to deceive.
Not web might be woven, not a shuttle thrown, or penalty of exile.
Web
A whole piece of linen cloth as woven.
Web
The texture of very fine thread spun by a spider for catching insects at its prey; a cobweb.
Web
Fig.: Tissue; texture; complicated fabrication.
The somber spirit of our forefathers, who wove their web of life with hardly a . . . thread of rose-color or gold.
Such has been the perplexing ingenuity of commentators that it is difficult to extricate the truth from the web of conjectures.
Web
A band of webbing used to regulate the extension of the hood.
Web
A thin metal sheet, plate, or strip, as of lead.
And Christians slain roll up in webs of lead.
Web
The blade of a sword.
The sword, whereof the web was steel,Pommel rich stone, hilt gold.
Web
A plate or thin portion, continuous or perforated, connecting stiffening ribs or flanges, or other parts of an object.
Web
The blade of a saw.
Web
The thin vertical plate or portion connecting the upper and lower flanges of an lower flanges of an iron girder, rolled beam, or railroad rail.
Web
Pterygium; - called also webeye.
Web
The thin, sharp part of a colter.
Web
A disk or solid construction serving, instead of spokes, for connecting the rim and hub, in some kinds of car wheels, sheaves, etc.
Web
The membrane which unites the fingers or toes, either at their bases, as in man, or for a greater part of their length, as in many water birds and amphibians.
Web
The bit of a key.
Web
The arm of a crank between the shaft and the wrist.
Web
The series of barbs implanted on each side of the shaft of a feather, whether stiff and united together by barbules, as in ordinary feathers, or soft and separate, as in downy feathers. See Feather.
Web
The part of a blackmith's anvil between the face and the foot.
Web
The world-wide web; - usually referred to as the web.
Web
To unite or surround with a web, or as if with a web; to envelop; to entangle.
Web
An intricate network suggesting something that was formed by weaving or interweaving;
The trees cast a delicate web of shadows over the lawn
Web
An intricate trap that entangles or ensnares its victim
Web
The flattened weblike part of a feather consisting of a series of barbs on either side of the shaft
Web
An interconnected system of things or people;
He owned a network of shops
Retirement meant dropping out of a whole network of people who had been part of my life
Tangled in a web of cloth
Web
Computer network consisting of a collection of internet sites that offer text and graphics and sound and animation resources through the hypertext transfer protocol
Web
A fabric (especially a fabric in the process of being woven)
Web
Membrane connecting the toes of some aquatic birds and mammals
Web
Construct or form a web, as if by weaving
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