polymorphism
The ability to assume different forms or shapes.
Noun
- The ability to assume different forms or shapes.
- The coexistence, in the same locality, of two or more distinct forms independent of sex, not connected by intermediate gradations, but produced from common parents.
- A feature pertaining to the dynamic treatment of data elements based on their type, allowing for a method to have several definitions.
- The property of certain typed formal systems of allowing for the use of type variables and binders/quantifiers over those type variables; likewise, the property of certain expressions (within such typed formal systems) of making use of at least one such typed variable.
- The ability of a solid material to exist in more than one form or crystal structure; pleomorphism.
- The regular existence of two or more different genotypes within a given species or population; also, variability of amino acid sequences within a gene's protein.
- Since 1990 they have found an entirely new role: they promise understanding of how and why our genes are all so different. They hold the key to human polymorphism. - 1999, Matt Ridley, Genome, Harper Perennial,...
- Some polymorphisms can be quite stable – so stable that they span the change from an ancestral to a descendant species. - 2004, Richard Dawkins, The Ancestor's Tale, Phoenix, published 2005, page 63:
Origin
* (object-oriented programming) Coined by British computer scientist Christopher Strachey in 1967. By surface analysis, poly- + -morphism.
Forms
Hyponyms
ad-hoc polymorphism copy number polymorphism dynamic polymorphism inclusion polymorphism parametric polymorphism static polymorphism subtype polymorphism
Related
dimorphism metamorphism monomorphism polymorph polymorphic polymorphistic polymorphous RFLP riflip