Genus vs Lant - What's the difference?
genus | lant |
(biology, taxonomy) a rank in the classification of organisms, below family and above species; a taxon at that rank
*
A group with common attributes.
*1945 , (Bertrand Russell), A History of Western Philosophy , p. 655:
*:Recollection is one of a whole genus of effects which are more or less peculiar to the phenomena that we naturally call "mental."
(topology) A number measuring some aspect of the complexity of any of various manifolds or graphs
(semantics) Within a definition, a broader category of the defined concept.
Aged urine.
(UK, dialect, Northern England) (the card game)
Any of several species of slender marine fishes of the genus Ammedytes''. The common European species (''A. tobianus'') and the American species (''A. Americanus ) live on sandy shores, buried in the sand, and are caught in large quantities for bait.
As nouns the difference between genus and lant
is that genus is a rank in the classification of organisms, below family and above species; a taxon at that rank while lant is aged urine.As a verb lant is
to flavor (ale) with aged urine.genus
English
Noun
(genera)- All magnolias belong to the genus ''Magnolia .
- Other species of the genus ''Bos'' are often called cattle or wild cattle.
- There are only two genera and species of seadragons .
- Müller criticized the division of the "Jubuleae" into two families and he cited Jubula as an annectant genus .
Synonyms
* See alsoDerived terms
* summum genusSee also
* generic name * class * division * kingdom * order * phylum * species * (semantics) differentiaExternal links
* *Anagrams
* English nouns with irregular plurals ----lant
English
Etymology 1
Alteration of earlier .Noun
(-)Etymology 2
Noun
- (Halliwell)
