Once again you demonstrate your refusal to accept subtle differences between terms; such as "in-sync" or "in-phase." If you wish to assert there is no essential difference between synchronism and phase because you can't tell the difference on your oscilloscope; that's fine, you're entitled to your opinion-you're simply wrong.
Just because you don't seem to know the "subtle" difference between
definition and
description, doesn't mean it's “spin” to say you only offer descriptions rather than definitions, nor is it “spin” to say those
descriptions are compatible with the
definitions of
phase I have offered or accepted from rattus. I do recognize the inability to measure
definition or
description on your oscilloscope puts you at a severe disadvantage; I apologize.
In the context of our discussion, from
Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, 11th edition (the “official” NFPA dictionary for otherwise undefined terms:
Definition a: a statement expressing the essential nature of something
Description a: an act of
describing;
specifically: discourse intended to give a mental image of something experienced
(In your case, I suppose we should replace "mental" with "oscilloscope.")
The website these various definitions link to (merriam-webster.com) uses the same definitions as
Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, 11th edition.
If you wish to cite alternate
relevant definitions, feel free. But you haven't done it yet.
I guess I will - as long as you keep releasing rabbits.