Taxonomy vs Iso - What's the difference?
taxonomy | iso |
The science or the technique used to make a classification.
A classification; especially , a classification in a hierarchical system.
(taxonomy, uncountable) The science of finding, describing, classifying and naming organisms.
(American football) An isolation play in which the fullback leads the tailback into the opposing defensive line
* {{quote-news, year=2007, date=January 5, quotee=, author=Pete Thamel, title=Scoreboard Shows This Isn't the Same Old Ohio State, work=New York Times
, passage=“I can remember lining up against them and saying, ‘This is the 15th iso that you’re going to get.’ ”}}
(category theory)
As nouns the difference between taxonomy and iso
is that taxonomy is the science or the technique used to make a classification while iso is (computing) a disk image of an iso 9660 file system (such as a cd or dvd); also used as the file extension.As a proper noun iso is
.As an initialism iso is
the.taxonomy
English
(wikipedia taxonomy)Noun
(taxonomies)Synonyms
* alpha taxonomyDerived terms
* folk taxonomy * scientific taxonomySee also
* classification * rank * taxon * domain * kingdom * subkingdom * superphylum * phylum * subphylum * class * subclass * infraclass * superorder * order * suborder * infraorder * parvorder * superfamily * family * subfamily * genus * species * subspecies * superregnum * regnum * subregnum * superphylum * phylum * subphylum * classis * subclassis * infraclassis * superordo * ordo * subordo * infraordo * taxon * superfamilia * familia * subfamilia * ontologyiso
English
Noun
(en noun)citation
