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Creature vs Eobiont - What's the difference?

creature | eobiont |

As nouns the difference between creature and eobiont

is that creature is a created thing, whether animate or inanimate; a creation while eobiont is a hypothetical primordial life-form or chemical precursor to a living organism.

creature

English

Alternative forms

*

Noun

(en noun)
  • A created thing, whether animate or inanimate; a creation.
  • * 1633 , (John Donne), "Sapho to Philænis":
  • Thoughts, my mindes creatures , often are with thee, / But I, their maker, want their libertie.
  • * 1646 , (Thomas Browne), Pseudodoxia Epidemica , I.10:
  • the natural truth of God is an artificial erection of Man, and the Creator himself but a subtile invention of the Creature .
  • * {{quote-book, year=1922, author=(Ben Travers), title=(A Cuckoo in the Nest)
  • , chapter=1 citation , passage=She was like a Beardsley Salome , he had said. And indeed she had the narrow eyes and the high cheekbone of that creature , and as nearly the sinuosity as is compatible with human symmetry.}}
  • A living being; an animal or human.
  • * {{quote-magazine, date=2013-06-08, volume=407, issue=8839, page=55, magazine=(The Economist)
  • , title= Obama goes troll-hunting , passage=According to this saga of intellectual-property misanthropy, these creatures [patent trolls] roam the business world, buying up patents and then using them to demand extravagant payouts from companies they accuse of infringing them. Often, their victims pay up rather than face the costs of a legal battle.}}
  • A being subservient to or dependent upon another.
  • * 1988 , James McPherson, Battle Cry for Freedom , Oxford 2003, p. 240:
  • they, too, despite the appearance of being creatures rather than creators of the Union, could assert the prior sovereignty of their states, for each had formed a state constitution […] before petitioning Congress for admission to the Union.

    Usage notes

    * For an explanation of the specialised use of the alternative spelling ''creäture'', see . * Adjectives often applied to "creature": evil, living, little, mythical, poor, strange, beautiful, wild, rational, marine, social, legendary, good, mysterious, curious, magical, dangerous, mythological, bizarre, monstrous, unhappy, huge, lowly, ugly, happy, unique, odd, weird, demonic, divine, imaginary, hideous, fabulous, nocturnal, angelic, political.

    Hyponyms

    * See also

    Derived terms

    * creature comfort

    References

    * * ----

    eobiont

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • a hypothetical primordial life-form or chemical precursor to a living organism
  • an artificially created creature; a Frankenstein's monster
  • Quotations

    * 1993, Manfred Eigen, Ruthild Winkler, Laws of the Game [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&vid=ISBN0691025665&id=DPhl9EjQ86gC&pg=PA244&lpg=PA244&dq=eobionts&sig=0HMykNhJ2ubrM_DhG_Mkf1hYoN8] *: Only when “eobionts ”—primordial organisms equipped with a primitive metabolism—began to multiply efficiently was this material used up. * 2003, Michael Cronin, Translation and Globalization [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&vid=ISBN0691025665&id=DPhl9EjQ86gC&pg=PA244&lpg=PA244&dq=eobionts&sig=0HMykNhJ2ubrM_DhG_Mkf1hYoN8] *: In the Dutch novelist Harry Mulisch’s The Procedure, the protagonist Victor Werker is the creator of artificial life in the form of the Eobiont (Mulisch 2001).