Phage vs Headful - What's the difference?
phage | headful |
(microbiology, virology) A virus that is parasitic on bacteria.
An amount of information, emotion, etc. present in the mind.
* 1994 , National Storytelling Association (U.S.), Sheila Dailey, Tales as tools: the power of story in the classroom (page 15)
(genetics) That fills the head of a phage
As nouns the difference between phage and headful
is that phage is (microbiology|virology) a virus that is parasitic on bacteria while headful is an amount of information, emotion, etc present in the mind.As an adjective headful is
(genetics) that fills the head of a phage.phage
English
Noun
(en-noun)Hans-Wolfgang Ackermann:Phage or phages. Bacteriophage Ecology Group (BEG) News, vol 14, 2002-10-01"The plural word phages' refers to different types of phage, whereas in common usage the word ' phage can be both singular and plural, referring in the plural sense to particles of the same type of phage." Maloy et al: Microbial Genetics, 2nd ed., 1984, ISBN 9780867202489, p. 81
Synonyms
* bacteriophageSee also
* virophageAnagrams
*headful
English
Noun
(en-noun)- The headful of stories you gather over a lifetime lets you refold the time and space of your history into meaningful, tellable patterns.