The difference between Complete and Unbroken
When used as adjectives, complete means with all parts included, whereas unbroken means whole, not divided into parts.
Complete is also noun with the meaning: a completed .
Complete is also verb with the meaning: to finish.
check bellow for the other definitions of Complete and Unbroken
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Complete as a verb (transitive):
To finish; to make done; to reach the end.
Examples:
"He completed the assignment on time."
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Complete as a verb (transitive):
To make whole or entire.
Examples:
"The last chapter completes the book nicely."
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Complete as an adjective:
With all parts included; with nothing missing; full.
Examples:
"My life will be complete once I buy this new television."
"She offered me complete control of the project."
"After she found the rook, the chess set was complete."
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Complete as an adjective:
Finished; ended; concluded; completed.
Examples:
"When your homework is complete, you can go and play with Martin."
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Complete as an adjective:
.
Examples:
"He is a complete bastard!"
"It was a complete shock when he turned up on my doorstep."
"Our vacation was a complete disaster."
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Complete as an adjective (analysis, of a [[metric space]]):
In which every Cauchy sequence converges to a point within the space.
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Complete as an adjective (algebra, of a [[lattice]]):
In which every set with a lower bound has a greatest lower bound.
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Complete as an adjective (math, of a [[category]]):
In which all small limits exist.
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Complete as an adjective (logic, of a proof system of a [[formal system]] with respect to a given [[semantics]]):
In which every semantically valid well-formed formula is provable.
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Complete as an adjective (computing theory, of a [[problem]]):
That is in a given complexity class and is such that every other problem in the class can be reduced to it (usually in polynomial time or logarithmic space).
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Complete as a noun:
A completed .
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Unbroken as an adjective:
Whole, not divided into parts.
Examples:
"After the vase had fallen down the flight of stairs we were amazed to find it still unbroken."
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Unbroken as an adjective:
Of a horse, not tamed.
Examples:
"There is something majestic about the spirit of an unbroken mustang as it runs wild across the prairie."
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Unbroken as an adjective:
Continuous, without interruption.
Examples:
"The team's unbroken winning streak was a record."
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Unbroken as a verb:
Compare words:
Compare with synonyms and related words:
- accomplish vs complete
- complete vs finish
- complete vs consummate
- complete vs perfect
- complete vs top off
- complete vs entire
- complete vs total
- complete vs concluded
- complete vs done
- complete vs downright
- complete vs utter
- complete vs unbroken
- entire vs unbroken
- unbroken vs undivided
- unbroken vs whole
- broken vs unbroken
- shattered vs unbroken
- smashed vs unbroken
- split vs unbroken
- unbroken vs untamed
- unbroken vs wild
- domesticated vs unbroken
- tame vs unbroken
- tamed vs unbroken
- continuous vs unbroken
- unbroken vs uninterrupted
- broken vs unbroken
- interrupted vs unbroken