What's the difference between connex and contex?

Connex


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To connect.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) She notified Companies House on 21 December that she had stepped down as a director of the public relations companies iNHouse PR , iNHouse Connex and Hersay Ltd .
  • (2) Let’s face it, today we are talking about a $15bn [West Connex] project that will transform the lives of Sydneysiders.” Abbott said he had had a number of “long conversations” with Bishop about the matter and while he said she was “very, very contrite”, he refused to urge her to apologise to the Australian people.
  • (3) The anterior hyaloid membrane in the aphakic area of the pupil is intact or ruptured and the ciliovitreal connex in the region of the lens dislocation may be normal or absent.
  • (4) Asked how Bishop was upholding parliamentary standards when she had “misused” taxpayers’ money, Abbott said: “Fair question.” But he said people should keep a “sense of proportion” about the Speaker’s actions, when compared with stage two of the West Connex road project in Sydney, which he launched on Monday.

Contex


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To context.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The process is complex, contex-related, and multivariate in nature.
  • (2) You can also find a few remarks about family contex, frequency of the lesions and heredity.
  • (3) Fewer deaths occurred in a contex previously associated with drug administration.
  • (4) These preliminary results suggest that the preoccipital cortex, which reportedly functions in pupillary constriction, accommodation, and convergence, entertains connections with the PON and other visuomotor-related structures, and thus could act as an intermediary in the pathway between the iFEF and PON, and provide a possible explanation for pupillary effects that occur with stimulation of the FEF (Jampel, 1960) and within the contex of other oculomotor activities.
  • (5) Results are discussed in the contex of cultural differences; further areas of investigation are offered.
  • (6) It was unclear whether real differences existed: "They may be contexability differences - women working in different roles, functional rather than commercial - [they may be] actual differences, stereotypes or a combination of the three."
  • (7) The data are seen to support a contex-tetrieval interpretation of hippocampal function.

Words possibly related to "connex"

Words possibly related to "contex"