The Collaborative International Dictionary
Monomorphic \Mon`o*mor"phic\, Monomorphous \Mon`o*mor"phous\, a. [Mono- + Gr. morfh` form.] (Biol.) Having but a single form; retaining the same form throughout the various stages of development; of the same or of an essentially similar type of structure; -- opposed to dimorphic, trimorphic, and polymorphic.
Wiktionary
a. 1 having or existing in a single shape or form 2 (context genetics of a gene English) invariant across a species 3 (context programming of a function English) taking only a single data type
Wikipedia
Monomorphic or Monomorphism may refer to:
- Monomorphism, an injective homomorphism in mathematics
- Monomorphic QRS complex, a wave pattern seen on an electrocardiogram
- Monomorphic, a linguistic term meaning "consisting of only one morpheme"
- Monomorphism (biology), when only one phenotype exists in a population of a species
- Monomorphism (computer science), a programming concept
Usage examples of "monomorphic".
We will be able to create sexual superathletes, girls with super-mammaries (and perhaps more or less than the standard two), and countless other varieties of the previously monomorphic human being.