Home / Dictionary / Biology

Biology Very Common

Origin: Greek suffix -ology

Biology has 4 different meanings across 1 category:

Noun

Definitions
Noun
1

the science that studies living organisms

"She chose biology as her major because she wanted to study how plants and animals function in their ecosystems."

2

characteristic life processes and phenomena of living organisms

"the biology of viruses"

3

all the plant and animal life of a particular region

"The local conservationists spent years studying the unique biology of the rainforest to protect its endangered species."

4

The study of all life or living matter.

"She chose to major in biology because she wanted to understand how every form of life functions and interacts within ecosystems."

In plain English: Biology is the study of living things and how they grow, survive, and interact with each other.

"She decided to study biology because she wanted to understand how living things grow and change."

Usage: Biology is the scientific study of living organisms and their interactions with one another and their environments. Use this term when referring to the academic field that explores how life functions, grows, and evolves.

Example Sentences
"She decided to study biology because she wanted to understand how living things grow and change." noun
"She chose to study biology in college because she loved learning about living things." noun
"The high school science class focused on the basics of biology during their morning period." noun
"Many people are surprised when they realize that biology plays a huge role in cooking and fermentation." noun
Related Terms
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
life science life collection
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
biogeography botany cryobiology cytology ecology embryology exobiology forestry genetics microbiology molecular biology morphology neurobiology paleobiology physiology radiobiology sociobiology zoology

Origin

The word biology comes from New Latin, where it was formed by combining Ancient Greek roots for "life" and "study." It entered English with its modern scientific meaning in 1799 through the work of physician Thomas Beddoes.

Rhyming Words
dogy fogy bogy logy pogy ology loogy elogy boogy alogy agogy dilogy oölogy oology eulogy perogy urology geology analogy trilogy
Compare
Biology vs