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zen_of_prog | 3 years ago

Concrete is made up of both cement (the CONtinuous part) and aggregate/stone (the disCRETE part), so cement vs concrete is kind of like broth vs soup, and concrete and stone like soup vs vegetables.

> So the main difference is that you can shape it without chiselling it.

I guess, yeah. Both are really good at withstanding compressive forces. Unlike Roman times, concrete today is usually reinforced with steel rebar, which gives it good tensile strength as well. This makes it useful for a lot of things that stone is not.

Disclaimer, take everything here with a grain of salt. Continuous-discrete is not the etymology of concrete. This might help too: https://youtu.be/UOHURuAf5iY

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ogogmad|3 years ago

Thanks. This was a helpful comment, especially the CONtinuous/disCRETE thing.

adrian_b|3 years ago

The " CONtinuous/disCRETE" might be useful as a mnemonic device, but you should be aware that there is no relationship between "concrete" and the "-tinuous/dis-" part.

"Con-" from "concrete" is indeed the same prefix as the "con-" from "continuous" and in both cases it means "together".

However, "-crete" from "concrete" is not the same suffix as the "-crete" from "discrete".

"-crete" from "concrete" means "grown" (it is the participle of the Latin verb "crescere", to grow), so "concrete" means "grown together".

"-crete" from "discrete" means "sifted" (it is the participle of the Latin verb "cernere", to pass through a sieve, to separate), so "discrete" means "sifted away", it comes from the same source as the verb "to discern".