Get to know Homomorphic better with 5 real example sentences, the meaning.
Homomorphic in a sentence
Homomorphic meaning
Of or pertaining to homomorphisms.
Using Homomorphic
- The main meaning on this page is: Of or pertaining to homomorphisms.
Context around Homomorphic
- Average sentence length in these examples: 31.4 words
- Position in the sentence: 2 start, 3 middle, 0 end
- Sentence types: 5 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis for Homomorphic
- In this selection, "homomorphic" usually appears in the middle of the sentence. The average example has 31.4 words, and this corpus slice is mostly made up of statements.
- Around the word, mapping, flowers and system stand out and add context to how "homomorphic" is used.
- Recognizable usage signals include contains a homomorphic image of and development of homomorphic system theory. That gives this page its own corpus information beyond isolated example sentences.
- By corpus frequency, "homomorphic" sits close to words such as aadujeevitham, aani and aarne, which helps place it inside the broader word index.
Example types with homomorphic
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
Homomorphic flowers may employ a biochemical (physiological) mechanism called self-incompatibility to discriminate between self and non-self pollen grains. (20 words)
The complex cepstrum was defined by Oppenheim in his development of homomorphic system theory A. V. Oppenheim, "Superposition in a class of nonlinear systems" Ph. (25 words)
We may think of G as the "most general" group that contains a homomorphic image of S. An important question is to characterize those semigroups for which this map is an embedding. (32 words)
Hence we have a homomorphic mapping, st(x), from F to R whose kernel consists of the infinitesimals and which sends every element x of F to a unique real number whose difference from x is in S; which is to say, is infinitesimal. (44 words)
The construction, detailed in the article on the Grothendieck group, is "universal", in that it has the universal property of being unique, and homomorphic to any other embedding of an abelian monoid in an abelian group. (36 words)
We may think of G as the "most general" group that contains a homomorphic image of S. An important question is to characterize those semigroups for which this map is an embedding. (32 words)
Example sentences (5)
Hence we have a homomorphic mapping, st(x), from F to R whose kernel consists of the infinitesimals and which sends every element x of F to a unique real number whose difference from x is in S; which is to say, is infinitesimal.
Homomorphic flowers may employ a biochemical (physiological) mechanism called self-incompatibility to discriminate between self and non-self pollen grains.
The complex cepstrum was defined by Oppenheim in his development of homomorphic system theory A. V. Oppenheim, "Superposition in a class of nonlinear systems" Ph.
The construction, detailed in the article on the Grothendieck group, is "universal", in that it has the universal property of being unique, and homomorphic to any other embedding of an abelian monoid in an abelian group.
We may think of G as the "most general" group that contains a homomorphic image of S. An important question is to characterize those semigroups for which this map is an embedding.