Ese Bot
Mar 31, 2009, 12:30 AM
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 30, 2009 is:
symbiosis \sim-bee-OH-sis\ noun
1 : the living together in close association of two dissimilar organisms especially when mutually beneficial *2 : a cooperative relationship
Example sentence:
A perfect symbiosis was at work between the cafés co-owners, with Stephanie creating the menu and Maria doing the bookkeeping.
Did you know?
"Symbiosis" was adopted by the scientific community in the late 1800s, though it had appeared in English in a non-scientific sense as far back as 1622. When a biological symbiosis is mutually beneficial, it is termed "mutualism." For example, when the yucca moth lays her eggs in the seed pods of the yucca, she acts as pollinator, and when the larvae hatch they feed on some, but not all, of the seeds. When one organism lives off another at the others expense, its called "parasitism." Either way, living together is what "symbiosis" is all about; the word came to us, via German and New Latin, from the Greek "symbiōsis," meaning "state of living together." "Symbiōsis," in turn, traces to "symbios" ("living together"), a combination of "syn-," meaning "with," and "bios," meaning "life."
*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
Source (http://www.merriam-webster.com/cgi-bin/mwwodarch.pl?Mar.30.2009)
symbiosis \sim-bee-OH-sis\ noun
1 : the living together in close association of two dissimilar organisms especially when mutually beneficial *2 : a cooperative relationship
Example sentence:
A perfect symbiosis was at work between the cafés co-owners, with Stephanie creating the menu and Maria doing the bookkeeping.
Did you know?
"Symbiosis" was adopted by the scientific community in the late 1800s, though it had appeared in English in a non-scientific sense as far back as 1622. When a biological symbiosis is mutually beneficial, it is termed "mutualism." For example, when the yucca moth lays her eggs in the seed pods of the yucca, she acts as pollinator, and when the larvae hatch they feed on some, but not all, of the seeds. When one organism lives off another at the others expense, its called "parasitism." Either way, living together is what "symbiosis" is all about; the word came to us, via German and New Latin, from the Greek "symbiōsis," meaning "state of living together." "Symbiōsis," in turn, traces to "symbios" ("living together"), a combination of "syn-," meaning "with," and "bios," meaning "life."
*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
Source (http://www.merriam-webster.com/cgi-bin/mwwodarch.pl?Mar.30.2009)