Copulation vs Population - What's the difference?
copulation | population |
(countable) The act of coupling or joining; union; conjunction.
(uncountable) Sexual procreation between a man and a woman or transfer of the sperm from male to female; usually applied to the mating process in nonhuman animals; coitus; coition.
The people living within a political or geographical boundary.
By extension, the people with a given characteristic.
A count of the number of residents within a political or geographical boundary such as a town, a nation or the world.
(biology) A collection of organisms of a particular species, sharing a particular characteristic of interest, most often that of living in a given area.
*{{quote-magazine, year=2013, month=May-June, author=
, title= (statistics) A group of units (persons, objects, or other items) enumerated in a census or from which a sample is drawn.
* 1883 , (Francis Galton) et al., Final Report of the Anthropometric Committee , Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science,
(computing) The act of filling initially empty items in a collection.
As nouns the difference between copulation and population
is that copulation is (countable) the act of coupling or joining; union; conjunction while population is population.copulation
English
Noun
Synonyms
* See alsopopulation
English
Noun
(en noun)David Van Tassel], [http://www.americanscientist.org/authors/detail/lee-dehaan Lee DeHaan
Wild Plants to the Rescue, volume=101, issue=3, magazine=(American Scientist) , passage=Plant breeding is always a numbers game.
p. 269.
- it is possible it [the Anglo-Saxon race] might stand second to the Scandinavian countries [in average height] if a fair sample of their population were obtained.