Residue vs. Reside — What's the Difference?
Difference Between Residue and Reside
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Compare with Definitions
Residue
The remainder of something after removal of parts or a part.
Reside
To live in a place permanently or for an extended period.
Residue
Matter remaining after completion of an abstractive chemical or physical process, such as evaporation, combustion, distillation, or filtration; residuum.
Reside
To be inherently present; exist
The potential energy that resides in flowing water.
Residue
The part of a monomer or other chemical unit that has been incorporated into a polymer or large molecule.
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Reside
To be vested, as a power or right
The authority that resides in the Supreme Court.
Residue
(Law) The remainder of a testator's estate after all specific bequests and applicable debts and expenses have been disposed of. Also called residuum.
Reside
(Computers) To be located or stored
A file that resides on a shared drive.
Residue
Whatever remains after something else has been removed.
Reside
To dwell permanently or for a considerable time; to have a settled abode for a time; to remain for a long time.
He still resides at his parents' house.
Residue
(chemistry) The substance that remains after evaporation, distillation, filtration or any similar process.
Reside
To have a seat or fixed position; to inhere; to lie or be as in attribute or element.
Residue
(biochemistry) A molecule that is released from a polymer after bonds between neighbouring monomers are broken, such as an amino acid in a polypeptide chain.
Reside
To sink; to settle, as sediment.
Residue
(legal) Whatever property or effects are left in an estate after payment of all debts, other charges and deduction of what is specifically bequeathed by the testator.
Reside
To dwell permanently or for a considerable time; to have a settled abode for a time; to abide continuosly; to have one's domicile of home; to remain for a long time.
At the moated grange, resides this dejected Mariana.
In no fixed place the happy souls reside.
Residue
(complex analysis) A form of complex number, proportional to the contour integral of a meromorphic function along a path enclosing one of its singularities.
Reside
To have a seat or fixed position; to inhere; to lie or be as in attribute or element.
In such like acts, the duty and virtue of contentedness doth especially reside.
Residue
That which remains after a part is taken, separated, removed, or designated; remnant; remainder.
The residue of them will I deliver to the sword.
If church power had then prevailed over its victims, not a residue of English liberty would have been saved.
Reside
To sink; to settle, as sediment.
Residue
That part of a testeator's estate wwhich is not disposed of in his will by particular and special legacies and devises, and which remains after payment of debts and legacies.
Reside
Make one's home or live in;
She resides officially in Iceland
I live in a 200-year old house
These people inhabited all the islands that are now deserted
The plains are sparsely populated
Residue
That which remains of a molecule after the removal of a portion of its constituents; hence, an atom or group regarded as a portion of a molecule; a moiety or group; - used as nearly equivalent to radical, but in a more general sense.
Reside
Live (in a certain place)
Residue
Any positive or negative number that differs from a given number by a multiple of a given modulus; thus, if 7 is the modulus, and 9 the given number, the numbers -5, 2, 16, 23, etc., are residues.
Reside
Be inherent or innate in;
Residue
Matter that remains after something has been removed
Residue
Something left after other parts have been taken away;
There was no remainder
He threw away the rest
He took what he wanted and I got the balance
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