Definition of Homogene. Meaning of Homogene. Synonyms of Homogene

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Homogene. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Homogene and, of course, Homogene synonyms and on the right images related to the word Homogene.

Definition of Homogene

Homogene
Homogene Ho"mo*gene, a. [Cf. F. homog[`e]ne.] Homogeneous. [Obs.] --B. Jonson.

Meaning of Homogene from wikipedia

- Look up homogeneity, homogeneous, or homogenize in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Homogeneity is a sameness of constituent structure. Homogeneity, homogeneous...
- Homogeneity and heterogeneity are concepts relating to the uniformity of a substance, process or image. A homogeneous feature is uniform in composition...
- Homogenes is a genus of beetles in the family Cerambycidae, containing the following species: Homogenes albolineatus (Buquet in Guérin-Méneville, 1844)...
- In sociology, role homogeneity is the degree of overlap amongst the different roles performed by different members of a community. Rural sociologists...
- The out-group homogeneity effect is the perception of out-group members as more similar to one another than are in-group members, e.g. "they are alike;...
- strength and the same direction at each point) would be compatible with homogeneity (all points experience the same physics). A material constructed with...
- In formal semantics, homogeneity is the phenomenon where plural expressions that seem to mean "all" negate to "none" rather than "not all". For example...
- In statistics, homogeneity and its opposite, heterogeneity, arise in describing the properties of a dataset, or several datasets. They relate to the validity...
- ecology, species homogeneity is a lack of biodiversity. Species richness is the fundamental unit in which to ****ess the homogeneity of an environment...
- In mathematics, the transcendental law of homogeneity (TLH) is a heuristic principle enunciated by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz most clearly in a 1710 text...