释义 |
Definition of nomenclature in English: nomenclaturenoun ˈnəʊmənˌkleɪtʃənə(ʊ)ˈmɛŋklətʃəˈnoʊmənˌkleɪtʃər mass noun1The devising or choosing of names for things, especially in a science or other discipline. the Linnean system of zoological nomenclature the most important rule of nomenclature is that the name of a substance should be unambiguous Example sentencesExamples - As concerns nomenclature, inadvertently, Professor Judson fails to follow his own advice, no doubt because he is a historian, not a biologist.
- As usual, we must begin with a careful study of nomenclature, using well-established rules of anatomical deconstruction.
- Then, as now, type specimens constituted the fundamental entity upon which species are described according to the rules of zoological nomenclature.
- We follow the general rules of zebrafish nomenclature for designating locus and allele names.
- Various aspects of nomenclature, classification, pathogenesis, antifungal therapy, laboratory methods and associated terminologies have been suitably updated.
- In conclusion, White's insistence on the need for consistency in mineral nomenclature is important, and, over time, I suspect that many of the problems he identifies will be sorted out.
- Jemima Lewis in the Telegraph makes some telling points about journalistic iconography and scientific nomenclature.
- For reasons given by Nevo, we will follow the traditional nomenclature, which considers separate taxa.
- No consistent system of nomenclature has emerged for the description of stromatoporoid external morphology.
- In phylogenetic nomenclature, taxon name definitions are based on ancestry and descent rather than the possession of subjective ‘key’ characters.
- Chapter 2 provides an informative and readable summary of nomenclature covering the rules and concepts of the zoological and botanical codes and their relation to stability.
- Each type of study has produced its own system of nomenclature and, hence, classification.
- A few years ago they started a system of plate nomenclature - three letters, three numbers.
- The topics in those categories that were less widely dispersed throughout the curriculum included stereochemistry, drug design, drug nomenclature, natural products and biotechnology.
- These set guidelines and publish a reports containing the rules of nomenclature.
- Official codes of nomenclature continue to enforce this rule - one name, one species - although rooting out synonyms and homonyms is a constant struggle.
- And, again as with wine, a whole complex system of nomenclature and description has grown up.
- The Levinson system of nomenclature was proposed originally for rare-earth minerals in order to avoid a proliferation of trivial names.
- What we need is a return to industry-wide nomenclature for malicious code; used by all vendors and facilitating the reporting, analysis, and resolution of such outbreaks.
- The gene nomenclature follows the rules for gene symbols in wheat.
- 1.1 The body or system of names used in a particular specialist field.
the students found it hard to decipher the nomenclature of chemical compounds Example sentencesExamples - His List of New Guinea Birds deals with the biogeography of those birds, as well as with their systematics and nomenclature.
- Genus and species nomenclature throughout this paper follow Sibley and Monroe, the most geographically comprehensive recent checklist.
- It's a good thing for you that you didn't go into a biological science; if you had, you would have been dealing not only with a binomial system of nomenclature but one in which the words are in Latin.
- The nomenclature of the gene names is explained in the Methods section
- As with alliance military technology, the interoperability of command systems and nomenclature is essential.
- This is the first attempt to document fully the nomenclatural history of a clade with the intent of proposing a coherent nomenclatural system to replace the traditional rank-based nomenclature.
- Part of the confusion regarding this nomenclature arises from the common lack of connection between the trace fossil name and the name of its original trace maker.
- There's a lot of truth in John Sturrock's warning about the tyranny of medical nomenclature.
- One underlying concern that arose throughout the analysis was the variation in medication nomenclature.
- In fact Irvine says Morrison's version largely sticks to its classical narrative and nomenclature, but she admits she was initially wary of being drawn into heavy-handed polemic.
- The result of this early work was the sometimes contradictory cellular nomenclature.
- For various reasons, the traditional nomenclature is used here.
- The nomenclature for protein families often has a historical background.
- Various histopathologic patterns of bronchiolar injury have been described and have led to confusing nomenclature with redundancies and overlapping terms.
- There is no systematic nomenclature for gene and protein names, which has led to a number of possible writing variants and synonyms being associated with the proteins that makes detection and classification difficult.
- A comprehensive index of all the microbiologic terms and bacterial nomenclature completes the book.
- Initially, Western readers will grapple with the code names and nomenclature of Soviet weapon systems - many do not even match the terms found in arms-control treaties sponsored by the Soviet Union.
- Although the original nomenclature is retained no attempt is made to interpret the coefficients in terms of the reaction processes that determine seedling growth.
- The majority of the terms in historical and currently used nomenclature have been summarized by Rosenqvist and van Kooten.
- Classification and nomenclature have changed.
- 1.2formal The term or terms applied to someone or something.
‘customers’ was preferred to the original nomenclature ‘passengers’ Example sentencesExamples - It would be as if a person simply made up new words or special meanings for words then recorded facts based on them, but then kept no record of that special nomenclature.
- What we need to do is hurry up and integrate, not just bringing down tariffs but removing non-tariff barriers, harmonizing customs procedures and policies and agreeing on tariff nomenclatures,’ he said.
- When someone says they're seeking avant-garde people, does that just mean that they're looking for pretentious people, or is this nomenclature something I don't quite entirely understand?
- Rationalists have over the centuries and under different nomenclatures given lead to the struggle for civilisation.
- Well we can go around in circles all day about the nomenclatures that we use.
- In doing so, the author's attention to detail is exceptional, with the reader being hard-pressed to find any technical errors amid the nomenclatures, characteristics or capabilities of equipment cited.
- And, I add, my duties didn't change much because of our vehicles' nomenclatures, just as NCO duties and responsibilities don't differ dramatically from what they were 50 or 60 years ago.
- For convenience sake I have coined my own nomenclature.
- It is termed ‘humanitarian’, but a more apt nomenclature would instead be ‘crime against humanity’.
- Customs procedures and nomenclatures and product standards will be harmonized, licensing procedures will be streamlined, visa requirements for travel will be expedited.
- In the 1980s, this nomenclature fell into disuse with increasing focus on industry.
- Some of these nomenclatures are still encountered in the literature, but for simplicity, only the new abbreviations are used.
- Even a superficial look at nomenclatures will show that many of these models are irreconcilable, as shown in Figure 1 below.
- And how can it change its nomenclatures summarily like this, anyway?
- In our culture, the meaning of ‘love’ has been all but lost, probably because we don't have the nomenclature in our language.
- Many years ago, when A. M. Rosenthal was executive editor of the New York Times, I raised a small question of religious nomenclature which resulted in a change in the paper's style manual.
- If you call with a complaint or a problem try to use the correct nomenclature or terminology for the part or problem you are addressing.
Synonyms phraseology, terms, expressions, words, language, parlance, vocabulary
Origin Early 17th century: from French, from Latin nomenclatura, from nomen 'name' + clatura 'calling, summoning' (from calare 'to call'). Definition of nomenclature in US English: nomenclaturenounˈnōmənˌklāCHərˈnoʊmənˌkleɪtʃər 1The devising or choosing of names for things, especially in a science or other discipline. Example sentencesExamples - We follow the general rules of zebrafish nomenclature for designating locus and allele names.
- These set guidelines and publish a reports containing the rules of nomenclature.
- The Levinson system of nomenclature was proposed originally for rare-earth minerals in order to avoid a proliferation of trivial names.
- A few years ago they started a system of plate nomenclature - three letters, three numbers.
- For reasons given by Nevo, we will follow the traditional nomenclature, which considers separate taxa.
- In phylogenetic nomenclature, taxon name definitions are based on ancestry and descent rather than the possession of subjective ‘key’ characters.
- Various aspects of nomenclature, classification, pathogenesis, antifungal therapy, laboratory methods and associated terminologies have been suitably updated.
- As usual, we must begin with a careful study of nomenclature, using well-established rules of anatomical deconstruction.
- As concerns nomenclature, inadvertently, Professor Judson fails to follow his own advice, no doubt because he is a historian, not a biologist.
- And, again as with wine, a whole complex system of nomenclature and description has grown up.
- Each type of study has produced its own system of nomenclature and, hence, classification.
- Chapter 2 provides an informative and readable summary of nomenclature covering the rules and concepts of the zoological and botanical codes and their relation to stability.
- The topics in those categories that were less widely dispersed throughout the curriculum included stereochemistry, drug design, drug nomenclature, natural products and biotechnology.
- The gene nomenclature follows the rules for gene symbols in wheat.
- Official codes of nomenclature continue to enforce this rule - one name, one species - although rooting out synonyms and homonyms is a constant struggle.
- In conclusion, White's insistence on the need for consistency in mineral nomenclature is important, and, over time, I suspect that many of the problems he identifies will be sorted out.
- No consistent system of nomenclature has emerged for the description of stromatoporoid external morphology.
- Then, as now, type specimens constituted the fundamental entity upon which species are described according to the rules of zoological nomenclature.
- Jemima Lewis in the Telegraph makes some telling points about journalistic iconography and scientific nomenclature.
- What we need is a return to industry-wide nomenclature for malicious code; used by all vendors and facilitating the reporting, analysis, and resolution of such outbreaks.
- 1.1 The body or system of names in a particular field.
the nomenclature of chemical compounds Example sentencesExamples - This is the first attempt to document fully the nomenclatural history of a clade with the intent of proposing a coherent nomenclatural system to replace the traditional rank-based nomenclature.
- Classification and nomenclature have changed.
- Initially, Western readers will grapple with the code names and nomenclature of Soviet weapon systems - many do not even match the terms found in arms-control treaties sponsored by the Soviet Union.
- For various reasons, the traditional nomenclature is used here.
- The majority of the terms in historical and currently used nomenclature have been summarized by Rosenqvist and van Kooten.
- Although the original nomenclature is retained no attempt is made to interpret the coefficients in terms of the reaction processes that determine seedling growth.
- Various histopathologic patterns of bronchiolar injury have been described and have led to confusing nomenclature with redundancies and overlapping terms.
- The result of this early work was the sometimes contradictory cellular nomenclature.
- Genus and species nomenclature throughout this paper follow Sibley and Monroe, the most geographically comprehensive recent checklist.
- It's a good thing for you that you didn't go into a biological science; if you had, you would have been dealing not only with a binomial system of nomenclature but one in which the words are in Latin.
- The nomenclature of the gene names is explained in the Methods section
- There is no systematic nomenclature for gene and protein names, which has led to a number of possible writing variants and synonyms being associated with the proteins that makes detection and classification difficult.
- Part of the confusion regarding this nomenclature arises from the common lack of connection between the trace fossil name and the name of its original trace maker.
- One underlying concern that arose throughout the analysis was the variation in medication nomenclature.
- The nomenclature for protein families often has a historical background.
- In fact Irvine says Morrison's version largely sticks to its classical narrative and nomenclature, but she admits she was initially wary of being drawn into heavy-handed polemic.
- There's a lot of truth in John Sturrock's warning about the tyranny of medical nomenclature.
- As with alliance military technology, the interoperability of command systems and nomenclature is essential.
- His List of New Guinea Birds deals with the biogeography of those birds, as well as with their systematics and nomenclature.
- A comprehensive index of all the microbiologic terms and bacterial nomenclature completes the book.
- 1.2formal The term or terms applied to someone or something.
“customers” was preferred to the original nomenclature “passengers.” Example sentencesExamples - When someone says they're seeking avant-garde people, does that just mean that they're looking for pretentious people, or is this nomenclature something I don't quite entirely understand?
- Many years ago, when A. M. Rosenthal was executive editor of the New York Times, I raised a small question of religious nomenclature which resulted in a change in the paper's style manual.
- Customs procedures and nomenclatures and product standards will be harmonized, licensing procedures will be streamlined, visa requirements for travel will be expedited.
- And how can it change its nomenclatures summarily like this, anyway?
- It is termed ‘humanitarian’, but a more apt nomenclature would instead be ‘crime against humanity’.
- For convenience sake I have coined my own nomenclature.
- Well we can go around in circles all day about the nomenclatures that we use.
- What we need to do is hurry up and integrate, not just bringing down tariffs but removing non-tariff barriers, harmonizing customs procedures and policies and agreeing on tariff nomenclatures,’ he said.
- Even a superficial look at nomenclatures will show that many of these models are irreconcilable, as shown in Figure 1 below.
- Rationalists have over the centuries and under different nomenclatures given lead to the struggle for civilisation.
- If you call with a complaint or a problem try to use the correct nomenclature or terminology for the part or problem you are addressing.
- It would be as if a person simply made up new words or special meanings for words then recorded facts based on them, but then kept no record of that special nomenclature.
- In the 1980s, this nomenclature fell into disuse with increasing focus on industry.
- In our culture, the meaning of ‘love’ has been all but lost, probably because we don't have the nomenclature in our language.
- And, I add, my duties didn't change much because of our vehicles' nomenclatures, just as NCO duties and responsibilities don't differ dramatically from what they were 50 or 60 years ago.
- Some of these nomenclatures are still encountered in the literature, but for simplicity, only the new abbreviations are used.
- In doing so, the author's attention to detail is exceptional, with the reader being hard-pressed to find any technical errors amid the nomenclatures, characteristics or capabilities of equipment cited.
Synonyms phraseology, terms, expressions, words, language, parlance, vocabulary
Origin Early 17th century: from French, from Latin nomenclatura, from nomen ‘name’ + clatura ‘calling, summoning’ (from calare ‘to call’). |