border, frontier, boundary, borderline

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shabani

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Hi everyone,
Could anyone please explain the difference between border, frontier, boundary and borderline? I get very similar definitions in the dictionary. Can we say that borderline is more abstract?

Thank you.
 
I'll start. 'Borderline' is not often used for what separates one country from another. As a noun, it is used for what separates two classes or categories: The borderline between adverbs and prepositions is not as clear in some cases as writers used to claim it was.

'Boundary' can have a similar meaning, though it also has other meanings. 'Border' is rarely used in this sense, and 'frontier' never, in my opinion.
 
a similar meaning to your first or second definition?
 
A similar meaning to that of 'borderline'.
 
Shabani, please scroll down all the way to the bottom of this page. You will see a box named "Similar Threads". I think you will find what you need there.
 
I'll start. 'Borderline' is not often used for what separates one country from another. As a noun, it is used for what separates two classes or categories: The borderline between adverbs and prepositions is not as clear in some cases as writers used to claim it was.

...


A particular use of this sort of 'borderline' is in reference to a disorder or pathology of some kind: 'He's very good with numbers and memorizing meaningless statistics, but useless with people. Sometimes I think he's borderline autistic.'

b
 
Afterthought: I had trouble thinking of an example yesterday, but I've just seen one - someone describing someone else's remarks as 'borderline racist' [=they were very close to being seen as racist].

b
 
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