The difference between Bugger all and Zero


Bugger all is also pronoun with the meaning: nothing.

Zero is also noun with the meaning: the numeric symbol that represents the cardinal number zero.

Zero is also numeral with the meaning: the cardinal number occurring before one and that denotes no quantity or amount at all, represented in arabic numerals as 0.

Zero is also verb with the meaning: to set a measuring instrument to zero.

Zero is also adjective with the meaning: no, not any.

check bellow for the other definitions of Bugger all and Zero

  1. Bugger all as a pronoun (chiefly, British, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, idiomatic, vulgar):

    Nothing.

    Examples:

    "You may not like paying taxes, but there's bugger all you can do about it."

  1. Zero as a noun:

    The numeric symbol that represents the cardinal number zero.

    Examples:

    "In unary and k-adic notation in general, zero is the empty string."

    "Write 0.0 to indicate a floating point number rather than the integer zero."

    "The zero sign in American Sign Language is considered rude in some cultures."

  2. Zero as a noun:

    The digit 0 in the decimal, binary, and all other base numbering systems.

    Examples:

    "One million has six zeroes."

  3. Zero as a noun (informal, uncountable):

    Nothing, or none.

    Examples:

    "The shipment was lost, so they had zero in stock."

    "He knows zero about humour."

    "In the end, all of our hard work amounted to zero."

  4. Zero as a noun:

    The value of a magnitude corresponding to the cardinal number zero.

    Examples:

    "The electromagnetic field does not drop all of the way to zero before a reversal."

  5. Zero as a noun:

    The point on a scale at which numbering or measurement originates.

    Examples:

    "The temperature outside is ten degrees below zero."

  6. Zero as a noun (mathematics):

    A value of the independent variables of a function, for which the function is equal to zero.

    Examples:

    "The zeroes of a polynomial are its roots by the fundamental theorem of algebra."

    "The derivative of a continuous, differentiable function that twice crosses the axis must have a zero."

    "The nontrivial zeros of the Riemann zeta function may all lie on the critical line."

  7. Zero as a noun (mathematics, algebra):

    The additive identity element of a monoid or greater algebraic structure, particularly a group or ring.

    Examples:

    "Since a commutative zero is the inverse of any additive identity, it must be unique when it exists."

    "The zero (of a ring or field) has the property that the product of the zero with any element yields the zero."

    "The quotient ring over a maximal ideal is a field with a single zero element."

  8. Zero as a noun (slang):

    A person of little or no importance.

    Examples:

    "They rudely treated him like a zero."

  9. Zero as a noun (military):

    A , a long range fighter aircraft operated by the Japanese Navy Air Service from 1940 to 1945.

  10. Zero as a noun:

    A setting of calibrated instruments such as a firearm.

  11. Zero as a noun (finance):

    A security which has a zero coupon (paying no periodic interest).

    Examples:

    "The takeovers were financed by issuing zeroes."

  1. Zero as an adjective (informal):

    no, not any

    Examples:

    "She showed zero respect."

  2. Zero as an adjective (meteorology):

    Of a cloud ceiling, limiting vision to 50 feet (15 meters) or less.

  3. Zero as an adjective (meteorology):

    Of horizontal visibility, limited to 165 feet (50.3 meters) or less.

  4. Zero as an adjective (linguistics):

    Present at an abstract level, but not realized in the data.

    Examples:

    "The stem of "kobieta" with the zero ending is "kobiet"."

  1. Zero as a verb (transitive):

    To set a measuring instrument to zero; to calibrate instrument scale to valid zero.

    Examples:

    "'Zero the fluorometer with the same solvent used in extraction."

  2. Zero as a verb (transitive, computing):

    To change a memory location or range to values of zero; to set a variable in a computer program to zero.

    Examples:

    "Results were inconsistent because an array wasn’t zeroed during initialization."

  3. Zero as a verb (transitive):

    To cause or set some value or amount to be zero.

    Examples:

    "They tried to zero the budget by the end of the quarter."

  4. Zero as a verb (transitive):

    To eliminate; to delete; to overwrite with zeros.

  5. Zero as a verb (intransitive):

    To disappear