Gram vs. Graph — What's the Difference?
Difference Between Gram and Graph
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Compare with Definitions
Gram
The gram (alternative spelling: gramme; SI unit symbol: g) is a metric system unit of mass. Originally defined as "the absolute weight of a volume of pure water equal to the cube of the hundredth part of a metre [1 cm3], and at the temperature of melting ice" (later at 4 °C, the temperature of maximum density of water).
Graph
A diagram that exhibits a relationship, often functional, between two sets of numbers as a set of points having coordinates determined by the relationship. Also called plot.
Gram
A metric unit of mass equal to one thousandth (10-3) of a kilogram. See Table at measurement.
Graph
A pictorial device, such as a pie chart or bar graph, used to illustrate quantitative relationships. Also called chart.
Gram
Any of several legumes, such as the chickpea, bearing seeds used as food.
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Graph
The spelling of a word.
Gram
The seeds of such a plant.
Graph
Any of the possible forms of a grapheme.
Gram
A grandmother.
Graph
A written character that represents a vowel, consonant, syllable, word, or other expression and that cannot be further analyzed.
Gram
A unit of mass equal to one-thousandth of a kilogram. Symbol: g.
Graph
To represent by a graph.
Gram
A leguminous plant grown for its seeds, especially the chickpea.
Graph
To plot (a function) on a graph.
Gram
(uncountable) The seeds of these plants.
Graph
A data chart (graphical representation of data) intended to illustrate the relationship between a set (or sets) of numbers (quantities, measurements or indicative numbers) and a reference set, whose elements are indexed to those of the former set(s) and may or may not be numbers.
Gram
Grandmother.
Graph
(mathematics) A set of points constituting a graphical representation of a real function; (formally) a set of tuples , where for a given function . See also Graph of a function Category:en:Curves Category:en:Functions
Gram
(US) graham
Graph
(graph theory) A set of vertices (or nodes) connected together by edges; (formally) an ordered pair of sets , where the elements of are called vertices or nodes and is a set of pairs (called edges) of elements of . See also Graph (discrete mathematics)
Gram
(colloquial) 'gram
Graph
(topology) A topological space which represents some graph (ordered pair of sets) and which is constructed by representing the vertices as points and the edges as copies of the real interval [0,1] (where, for any given edge, 0 and 1 are identified with the points representing the two vertices) and equipping the result with a particular topology called the graph topology.
Gram
Angry.
Graph
A morphism from the domain of to the product of the domain and codomain of , such that the first projection applied to equals the identity of the domain, and the second projection applied to is equal to .
Gram
The East Indian name of the chick-pea (Cicer arietinum) and its seeds; also, other similar seeds there used for food.
Graph
A graphical unit on the token-level, the abstracted fundamental shape of a character or letter as distinct from its ductus (realization in a particular typeface or handwriting on the instance-level) and as distinct by a grapheme on the type-level by not fundamentally distinguishing meaning.
Gram
A metric unit of weight equal to one thousandth of a kilogram
Graph
(transitive) To draw a graph.
Gram
Danish physician and bacteriologist who developed a method of staining bacteria to distinguish among them (1853-1938)
Graph
To draw a graph of a function.
Graph
A curve or surface, the locus of a point whose coördinates are the variables in the equation of the locus; as, a graph of the exponential function.
Graph
A diagram symbolizing a system of interrelations of variable quantities using points represented by spots, or by lines to represent the relations of continuous variables. More than one set of interrelations may be presented on one graph, in which case the spots or lines are typically distinguishable from each other, as by color, shape, thickness, continuity, etc. A diagram in which relationships between variables are represented by other visual means is sometimes called a graph, as in a bar graph, but may also be called a chart.
Graph
A drawing illustrating the relations between certain quantities plotted with reference to a set of axes
Graph
Represent by means of a graph;
Chart the data
Graph
Plot upon a graph
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