The difference between Nat and Nit
When used as nouns, nat means a spirit in burmese mythology, whose cult is followed alongside buddhism, whereas nit means the egg of a louse.
Nat is also adverb with the meaning: not.
Nit is also verb with the meaning: to have the modus vivendi of a drug addict, to live the life of a nitty.
check bellow for the other definitions of Nat and Nit
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Nat as a noun:
A spirit in Burmese mythology, whose cult is followed alongside Buddhism.
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Nat as an adverb (obsolete):
Not.
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Nat as a noun:
logarithmic unit of information or entropy, based on natural logarithms
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Nit as a noun:
The egg of a louse.
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Nit as a noun:
A young louse.
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Nit as a noun (UK, Ireland, slang):
A head louse regardless of its age.
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Nit as a noun (UK, slang):
A fool, a nitwit.
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Nit as a noun:
A nitpicker.
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Nit as a noun:
A minor shortcoming.
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Nit as a verb (MLE):
To have the modus vivendi of a drug addict, to live the life of a nitty.
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Nit as a noun:
A candela per square meter.
Examples:
"This brightness of this LCD screen is between 900 and 1000 nits."
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Nit as a noun: