Pronunciation: /brɪks ənd ˈdeɪtə/
noun a word that represents a person, place, thing, or idea
A1 Bricks and data are two different things.
A2 The building was constructed using bricks and data was collected for analysis.
B1 The architect used bricks to build the house, while the data was used to make informed decisions.
B2 The company used bricks to expand their office building and analyzed data to improve their operations.
C1 The city was built with bricks from the local quarry, and data was used to plan future developments.
C2 The ancient civilization used bricks to build their monuments, and modern researchers use data to uncover their history.
formal The construction project required thousands of bricks to be laid in a precise pattern.
informal We need to gather more bricks before we can start building the wall.
slang Let's stack up those bricks and get this party started!
figurative In order to make sense of the data, we need to lay down the foundational bricks of analysis.
bricks and data
bricks and data
will be bricks and data
have been bricks and data
are being bricks and data
brick and datum
bricks and data
to brick and data
bricking and data-ing
bricked and dataed