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MorphologyThe science of the form and structure of organisms (plants, animals, and other forms of life).
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Morphology[Gk. morphe, form + logos, discourse] The form and structure of an organism and its parts.
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Morphology1824 in biology (from German Morphologie, 1817); 1869 in philology; from morpho- + -logy. Related: Morphological; morphologist. Related: Morphologist.
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Morphologystudy of the form and structure of organisms or materials.
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Morphologyn. The form and structure of anything, usually applied to the shapes, parts, and arrangement of features in living and fossil organisms.
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MorphologyThe part of a language concerned with the structure of morphemes and how these morphemes combine. Linguists use this term in contrast with syntax.
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MorphologyThe study of form and structure. The morphology of an apple would include a description of its skin, stem, core, seeds, fruit, and how they are arranged as a whole.
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MorphologyThe study of the form of plants or plant parts.
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Morphologythe form and structure of plants and animals.
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Morphologyn. the science of organic forms.
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Morphologylit. form, shape or structure. Can be applied in physical geography e.g. the morphology of a hill, or human geography e.g. the morphology of a village.
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MorphologyThe form and structure of an organism or land-form, or any of its parts. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 2007 1
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MorphologyMorphology is the branch of linguistics that studies patterns of word-formation within and across languages, and attempts to formulate rules that model the knowledge of the speakers of those languages [..]
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MorphologyThe science of structure. Includes cytology, the study of cell structure; histology, the study of tissue structure; and anatomy, the study of gross structure. mortality
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MorphologyMorphology is the study of the internal structure of words.
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Morphologyin the context of biology is the branch of primarily classification orientated biology which focusses on the forms and structures of organisms.
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MorphologyMorphology is a widely used term to describe the study of ongoing changes in any particular venue. For instance, the English language has experienced many changes in the past several centuries and lin [..]
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MorphologyThe science of the form and structure of organisms (plants, animals, and other forms of life).
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MorphologyThe study of the form and shape of an animal.
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MorphologyStudy of form and external structure.
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Morphologystudy of form and structure of animals and plants and their fossil remains.
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MorphologyThe study of the form and structure of a cell or organism and their specific structural features.
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MorphologyMorphology is the study of structure and form of words.
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MorphologyThe shape and structure of a thing; in human geography the study of morphology is often used to understand landscapes
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Morphologythe way in which parts of words combine to form words
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MorphologyThe form and structure of an organism or land-form, or any of its parts.
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Morphologythe study or description of the structure or forms of words. N
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MorphologyThe area of language dealing with how meaningful bits (usually but not exclusively words) are created and manipulated by the combination of language sounds.
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Morphology(n) the branch of biology that deals with the structure of animals and plants(n) studies of the rules for forming admissible words(n) the admissible arrangement of sounds in words(n) the branch of geo [..]
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Morphologythe form and structure of an organism or any of its parts
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MorphologyThe study of shape or form. See geomorphology
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MorphologyScience dealing with the form and structure of organisms, not considering the function; the form and structure of a particular organism, organ, or part.
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MorphologyThe branch of linguistics which studies how words change their forms when they change grammatical function, i.e., their inflections swim - swam - swum - swimming - swimmer; cat - cats; mouse - mice; happy - happier – happily, among others: See also Syntax.
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MorphologyThe microstructure of the solid phases of materials. The grain shapes and structure of crystals of the chemical components of a battery.
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Morphologybranch of bioscience dealing with the study of the form and structure of organisms and their specific structural features http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morphology_(biology)
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MorphologyThe study of how the aspects of language structure are related to the ways words are formed from prefixes, roots, and suffixes (e.g., mis-spell-ing), and how words are related to each other.
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MorphologyThe study of form. It is used in linguistics (the study of morphemes and word construction).
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Morphologyphysical attributes of an individual.
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Morphologythe study of body form and structure
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Morphology(morfologi): the study of how morphemes combine into words, and of how words are inflected.
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MorphologyRiver/ESTUARY/lake/seabed form and its change with time.
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MorphologyThe external shape of a crystal; synonymous with the crystal habit.
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Morphology[1] The gross form and structure of an organism, or of a part of an organism. in paleontology and phylogeny may refer to the form or structure of a particular bone or shell, and its comparison with that of similar species. [b] Short for Morphology-based phylogeny (see next entry), and also referring to any resulting phylogenetic trees that may be d [..]
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MorphologyThe form, shape, and/or structures of organisms.
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MorphologyThe level of linguistics which is concerned with the structure of words, both from the point of view of inflections and of word-formation. It is traditionally located between phonology (the level of s [..]
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MorphologyThe study of how the aspects of language structure are related to the ways words are formed from prefixes, roots, and suffixes (e.g., mis-spell-ing), and how words are related to each other.
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MorphologyAn examination of the morphemic structure of words; an appreciation of the fact that words with common roots share common meanings, and that affixes change words in predictable and consistent ways.
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MorphologyMorphology is the study of the forms of words and how they are constructed in terms of parts that have meaning. For example, whakawhanaungatanga can be divided into whaka, whanau, nga, and tanga, each [..]
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MorphologyMorphology is the study of how the aspects of language structure are related to the ways words are formed from prefixes, roots, and suffixes (e.g., mis-spell-ing), and how words are related to each ot [..]
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Morphologythe branch of biology that deals with the form and structure of organisms without consideration of function
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MorphologyThe science of the form and structure of organisms (plants, animals, and other forms of life).
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MorphologyThe science or study of the functional form of an animal.
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Morphologythe size, shape and color of an organism; the outward appearance; often the way one species is differentiated from another
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MorphologyThe study of development and change of structure and form.
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MorphologyThe form and structure of an organism or any of its parts
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MorphologyThe form and structure of an organism or its components.
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MorphologyPhysical shape or form of plants and animals.
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Morphologythe physical appearance of an object.
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MorphologyThe study of the structure and form of microorganisms
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Morphologythe study of structure and form of words in language, including inflection, derivation, and formation of compounds. See also: accidence.
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MorphologyGrammatical and other variants of words that are derived from the same root or stem.
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MorphologyThe study of the form of plants or plant parts.
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MorphologyExternal aspects of an organism, including size, shape, proportions, scales, colour. Morphometric data add a quantitative element to descriptions and can be used to make comparisons with other species.
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MorphologyStudy of the shape and visual appearance of cells, tissues and organs.
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Morphology
(uncountable) A scientific study of form and structure, usually without regard to function. Especially:
# (linguistics) The study of the internal structure of morphemes (words and their semantic bu [..]
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