| binomial | <mathematics> An expression consisting of two terms connected by the sign plus (+) or minus; as, a+b, or 7-3. Origin: L. Bis twice + nomen name: cf. F. Binome, LL. Binomius (or fr. Bi- + Gr. Distribution ?). Cf. Monomial. 1. Consisting of two terms; pertaining to binomials; as, a binomial root. 2. Having two names; used of the system by which every animal and plant receives two names, the one indicating the genus, the other the species, to which it belongs. <mathematics> Binomial theorem, the theorem which expresses the law of formation of any power of a binomial. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| binomial distribution | The probability distribution associated with two mutually exclusive outcomes; used to model cumulative incidence rates and prevalence rates. The bernoulli distribution is a special case of binomial distribution. (12 Dec 1998) |
| binomial nomenclature | <biology, ecology> The system of having two names (genus and specific epithet, also called Latin binomial) for each organism. (09 Oct 1997) |
| negative binomial distribution | <epidemiology> A distribution which is parameterised by a mean m and an aggregation parameter k which is large when aggregation is small; in fact as k becomes large, the negative binomial distribution approximates the Poisson distribution. (05 Dec 1998) |
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Synonyms : Binomial Distribution, Negative, Binomial Distributions, Binomial Distributions, Negative, Distribution, Bernoulli, Distribution, Binomial, Distribution, Negative Binomial, Distributions, Binomial, Distributions, Negative Binomial
| binomial distribution |
a theoretical distribution of the number of successes in a finite set of independent trials with a constant probability of success
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| binomial |
relating to binomials; "binomial expression" consisting of two names or terms; "binomial nomenclature" (mathematics) a quantity expressed as a sum or difference of two terms; a polynomial with two terms
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| binomial nomenclature |
In biology, binomial nomenclature is a standard convention used for naming species. As the word 'binomial' suggests, the scientific name of a species is formed by the combination of two terms: the genus name and the species epithet or descriptor. The first term (generic name) is always capitalized, while the specific epithet (trivial "name") is not; both are to be typeset in italics, e.g. Homo sapiens. The genus name can be abbreviated to its initial letter, but never omitted, (as H. ...
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| binomial |
A name consisting of two parts. eg)a genus name and a species name (Binomial nomenclature).
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| binomial nomenclature |
the practice of using genus and species names to refer to an organism established by Carolus Linnaeus
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| binomial | a quantity expressed as a sum or difference of two terms |
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| binomial | relating to binomials |
| binomial | consisting of two names or terms |
| binomial | a theoretical distribution of the number of successes in a finite set of independent trials with a constant probability of success |
| binomial | a theorem giving the expansion of a binomial raised to a given power |
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