"Zettametre" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
A zettametre is a unit of length in the International System of Units (SI) that is part of the metric prefix system. It is defined as a trillion (1 trillion) metres (1,000,000,000,000 metres)
A skeptic or inquirer who seeks to discover knowledge through logical reasoning and empirical evidence, particularly in the investigation of paranormal claims or unconventional subjects.
Credulous persons, suggesting unverified or unverifiable information <br><br>(from Greek.czhetikos, suspicious)
Zetland is a surname, toponymic, composed of "zet" after Old Norse "dals" (valley) and "land" meaning "land" or "place".
A zettabyte (not zettabit) is a unit of information or digital storage capacity, which is equal to one trillion gigabytes (1 trillion bytes of digital information). It is a term used to express extremely large amounts of data storage, such as in computing, data centers, or cloud storage.<br><br>(Note: A zettabit would be equal to one sextillion bits, which is many orders of magnitude smaller than a zettabyte)
A zettabyte is a unit of digital information or data storage capacity, equivalent to one trillion gigabytes (1,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes) or one sextillion bytes.
Zeugmatic is a type of figure of speech in which a phrase or sentence is constructed with two separated elements, where the second element modifies the first, instead of the typical construction where the first element modifies the second.<br><br>Example: "F Ellen Price is a big athlete." (Here "big" (the first element) is a discrete unit, separate from the person (the subject), and their success or fame is what makes the second element, and the person athletic).<br><br>In ancient rhetoric, zeugma was used for emphasis.
A rare and fascinating term!<br><br>The word "zeugobranchiata" belongs to the field of zoology, specifically to the classification and study of marine animals.<br><br>In this context, "zeugobranchiata" refers to a group of marine animals that have a specific characteristic: they have their gills (or branchiae) attached to the notochord, which is a flexible, rod-like structure found in the embryos of most chordates (animals with a notochord).