Parts vs Homogeneous - What's the difference?
parts | homogeneous |
(plural only) intellectual ability or learning
vicinity, region
* 1854 , Lord Cockburn, Memoir of Thomas Thomson , Scotland Bannatyne Club, page 241:
(plural only, euphemistic) The male genitals.
(part)
Of the same kind; alike, similar.
Having the same composition throughout; of uniform make-up.
* 1946 , (Bertrand Russell), History of Western Philosophy , I.25:
(chemistry) in the same state of matter.
(mathematics) Of which the properties of a smaller set apply to the whole; scalable.
(proscribed)
As a noun parts
is .As a verb parts
is (part).As an adjective homogeneous is
of the same kind; alike, similar.parts
English
Noun
(head)- He was a man of great parts but little virtue.
- We intend being at Leamington before long, unless some change in the weather should make our stay in these parts more tolerable.
Verb
(head)Statistics
*Anagrams
* * * * * ----homogeneous
English
Alternative forms
* (proscribed)Adjective
(-)- Their citizens were not of homogeneous origin, but were from all parts of Greece.
- The function ''f(x,y)=x2+y2'' is homogeneous of degree 2 because ''f(''?''x,''?''y)=''?''2f(x,y)''.
