Forbear vs. Awesomely vs. Fat vs. Sonhood vs. Ricochet vs. Channel vs. Trending Comparisons. Mandate vs. Ivermectin vs. Skinwalker vs. Socialism vs. Man vs. Supersonic vs. Gazelle vs. Jem vs. Mouse vs. Lubuntu vs. You vs. Virtual vs. Featured Comparisons Guidence vs.
Togather vs. Maintenance vs. Brachycardia vs. Villainize vs. Catagory vs. Correspondance vs. They really mean the same thing. I think they are quite interchangeable. BUT I see my timetable as being very fixed, throughout the year I see the same classes at the same time each week, and that is the timetable, where as a schedule could be used for a thing that is different each week, say a meeting schedule or some such thing.
United States - GA English. While "schedule" could be used for "timetable" in all cases I can think of, the reverse is not as readily true. For example, someone has a schedule for their day, but the word timetable makes no sense in this context. Timetable conveys the sense of a published thing which lists the schedule of events over an extended period of time, e. Alternatively, a timetable might be translated as a person's expectations of when something will occur.
For example "We can do this on your timetable" or "the President laid out a timetable for demilitarization of the region. I disagree; I think it's perfectly conceivable to have a timetable for the day. I think they are synonymous. A timetable may suggest that each event is more dependant on the specific times, such as "Geography class between We describe airlines that operate regular flights as scheduled airlines.
Scheduled airlines have flight timetables. Hi, everyone: Which one is used more frequently in Am. E and Brit. I'm on a tight timetable trip? I'm on a tight schdule trip? I'm on a tightly scheduled trip. I don't believe I have ever heard of a "timetabled" trip - I think "timetable" can only be used as a noun. Or, you could say, "My trip has a tight itinerary. Can I say "My trip has a tight schedule"? The schedule has to do with the start and end times of various events.
The itinerary usually has this information along with brief descriptions of the events themselves. The schedule being tight has nothing to do with the description of the events, so I would say, "tight schedule", not "tight itinerary.
Examples: "whether or not to schedule a patient". Timetable as a noun : a structured schedule of events with the times at which they occur, especially times of arrivals and departures Examples: "The timetable has been changed several times since it was first announced. Examples: "I've timetabled the meeting for Monday afternoon. Compare words:. Compare with synonyms and related words: schedule vs timetable timeline vs timetable schedule vs timetable.
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