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landmark vs Fall of Man

Fall of Man vs landmark

landmark and Fall of Man both are nouns.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
landmark Yes No No No
Fall of Man Yes No No No
As nouns, Fall of Man is a hyponym of landmark; that is, Fall of Man is a word with a more specific, narrower meaning than landmark:
  • landmark: an event marking a unique or important historical change of course or one on which important developments depend
  • Fall of Man: (Judeo-Christian mythology) when Adam and Eve ate of the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil in the Garden of Eden, God punished them by driving them out of the Garden of Eden and into the world where they would be subject to sickness and pain and eventual death
Other hyponyms of landmark include road to Damascus.
landmark (noun) Fall of Man (noun)
an anatomical structure used as a point of origin in locating other anatomical structures (as in surgery) or as point from which measurements can be taken (Judeo-Christian mythology) when Adam and Eve ate of the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil in the Garden of Eden, God punished them by driving them out of the Garden of Eden and into the world where they would be subject to sickness and pain and eventual death
a mark showing the boundary of a piece of land
an event marking a unique or important historical change of course or one on which important developments depend
the position of a prominent or well-known object in a particular landscape
Difference between landmark and Fall of Man

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