The difference between Decenary and Tithing
When used as nouns, decenary means a tithing, whereas tithing means a tithe or tenth in its various senses, : the tithe given as an offering to the church. the payment of tithes. the collection of tithes.
Decenary is also adjective with the meaning: of or related to the number ten, as a base of numeration.
check bellow for the other definitions of Decenary and Tithing
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Decenary as an adjective (particularly):
Of or related to the number ten, as a base of numeration.
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Decenary as an adjective:
Containing or comprising ten items or units.
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Decenary as an adjective (law, historical):
Of or related to a tithing.
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Decenary as a noun (law, historical):
A tithing.
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Tithing as a noun (particularly):
A tithe or tenth in its various senses, : The tithe given as an offering to the church. The payment of tithes. The collection of tithes.
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Tithing as a noun (dialectal):
Ten sheaves of wheat (originally set up as such for the tithe-proctor).
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Tithing as a noun (historical, law):
A body of households (originally a tenth of a hundred or ten households) bound by frankpledge to collective responsibility and punishment for each other's behavior.
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Tithing as a noun (historical, law):
A part of the hundred as a rural division of territory.
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Tithing as a noun (obsolete):
Decimation: the killing of every tenth person or the killing of every person except each tenth.
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Tithing as a verb:
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Tithing as a noun (obsolete):
A reward, grant, or concession.