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Homology   Listen
noun
Homology  n.  
1.
The quality of being homologous; correspondence; relation; as, the homologyof similar polygons.
2.
(Biol.) Correspondence or relation in type of structure in contradistinction to similarity of function; as, the relation in structure between the leg and arm of a man; or that between the arm of a man, the fore leg of a horse, the wing of a bird, and the fin of a fish, all these organs being modifications of one type of structure. Note: Homology indicates genetic relationship, and according to Haeckel special homology should be defined in terms of identity of embryonic origin. See Homotypy, and Homogeny.
3.
(Chem.) The correspondence or resemblance of substances belonging to the same type or series; a similarity of composition varying by a small, regular difference, and usually attended by a regular variation in physical properties; as, there is an homology between methane, CH4, ethane, C2H6, propane, C3H8, etc., all members of the paraffin series. In an extended sense, the term is applied to the relation between chemical elements of the same group; as, chlorine, bromine, and iodine are said to be in homology with each other. Cf. Heterology.
General homology (Biol.), the higher relation which a series of parts, or a single part, bears to the fundamental or general type on which the group is constituted.
Serial homology (Biol.), representative or repetitive relation in the segments of the same organism, as in the lobster, where the parts follow each other in a straight line or series. See Homotypy.
Special homology (Biol.), the correspondence of a part or organ with those of a different animal, as determined by relative position and connection.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Homology" Quotes from Famous Books



... Professor Fiske, in his Outline of Cosmic Philosophy, made a very interesting remark about societies like those of China, ancient Egypt, and ancient Assyria. "I am expressing," he said, "something more than an analogy, I am describing a real homology so far as concerns the process of development,—when I say that these communities simulated modern European nations, much in the same way that a tree-fern of the carboniferous period simulated the exogenous trees of the present time." So far as this is true of ...
— Japan: An Attempt at Interpretation • Lafcadio Hearn

... cup-like scales at the base of primaries in many insects; specifically in Hymenoptera: in Lepidoptera, the patagia or shoulder tippets; but the homology is disputed; also applied to the lappet-like pieces forming the collar: in Diptera, the alulae, q.v.: the latter use is unfortunate and should be abandoned; the first definition should limit the use of ...
— Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology • John. B. Smith

... preface this with a few words upon the homology of the roots of the Rhizocephala, i.e. the tubules which penetrate from its point of adhesion into the body of the host, ramify amongst the viscera of the latter, and terminate in caecal branchlets. In the pupae of the Rhizocephala (Figure 58) the foremost limbs ("prehensile antennae") ...
— Facts and Arguments for Darwin • Fritz Muller



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