Momic vs Monic - What's the difference?
momic | monic |
A comedienne whose act focuses on her children and family life.
* 1996 , Dick Kreck, "Everything wacky in 'Momville'", Denver Post , 2 March 1996:
(mathematics) of a polynomial whose leading coefficient is one
(biology) monomorphic
(category theory) Of a morphism : that it is a monomorphism.
*
As a noun momic
is a comedienne whose act focuses on her children and family life.As an adjective monic is
of a polynomial whose leading coefficient is one.momic
English
Noun
(en noun)- They should be called "momics ," those housewives who climb comedy-club stages and tell jokes about their kids and dirty laundry.
Quotations
*monic
English
Adjective
(-)- It is often convenient to view a monic' arrow , defined in Chapter 1, as showing that ''A'' is a copy of a part of ''C'', and that ''i'' maps the copy on to that part. For example, in '''Set''', the '''monic arrows are the one-to-one functions and, clearly, if ''i'' is one-to-one then ''A'' is a copy of a subset of ''C'', namely of the image of ''i .