Phenome vs Morpheme - What's the difference?
phenome | morpheme |
The whole set of phenotypic entities in a cell, tissue, organ, organisms, and species. This includes phenotypic traits with genotypic origins.
(linguistic morphology) The smallest linguistic unit within a word that can carry a meaning, such as "un-", "break", and "-able" in the word "unbreakable".
As nouns the difference between phenome and morpheme
is that phenome is the whole set of phenotypic entities in a cell, tissue, organ, organisms, and species this includes phenotypic traits with genotypic origins while morpheme is morpheme (smallest linguistic unit).phenome
English
Noun
(en noun)See also
* electrophoresis * bioinformaticsReferences
*Phenome'', in ''Drug Discovery and Development Glossary. *
Bioinformatics Journal
Anagrams
*morpheme
English
(wikipedia morpheme)Noun
(en noun)- The word pigs'' consists of two morphemes : ''pig'' (a particular animal) and ''s'' (indication of the plural).
- The word werewolves''' consists of four morphemes: "''were''" (~ man), "''wolf''" (a particular animal), "''es " (plural), and " ' " (indicating possessive).