A Dictionary of Biology is an up-to-date reference work explains
several thousand specialized words that allow for empirical
approaches to the biological sciences. It includes more than bare
definitions, including information about most of the things named
so as to convey their significance in biological discussion. M.
Abercrombie, C. J. Hickman, and M. L. Johnson in effect interpret
this language as it is actually used, emphasizing customary usage
rather than etymology.
This comprehensive lexicon includes two thousand entries. Many
unfamiliar terms, especially the rarer ones, are defined with the
help of other technical terms, perhaps equally unfamiliar. This
trick of dictionary-makers could only be avoided by giving a
complete account of a large part of biology under each heading.
Every biological technical term used in a definition is itself
defined elsewhere in the dictionary; though some semi-technical
terms, words that can be found in any English dictionary are
omitted.
The authors use codes throughout the dictionary to help the
reader to interpret the use of a word such as whether it is used in
relation to plants and animals only, whether the word is an
adjective, and when a term is defined elsewhere and adds
information to the current definition. The result is an invaluable
guide for the layman, the student, and the scholar alike. It
presents clear and authoritative explanations of the terms and will
remain useful as a quick and concise source of reference.
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