"Homothermic" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Homothermic refers to animals that maintain a relatively constant body temperature, often around 37°C (98.6°F), regardless of the temperature of their surroundings. This is in contrast to poikilothermic animals, which regulate their body temperature by adjusting to changes in the surrounding environment. Examples of homothermic animals include humans, mammals, and birds.
Homostyly refers to a plant breeding habit in which the same or similar morphology appears in both male and female flowers or in all flowers of a particular plant.
Homotaxic refers to the arrangement of two or more units of a character or feature that are placed in a similar or identical taxonomic level, often indicating a lack of significant evolutionary change or a characteristic that is highly conserved across a particular group of organisms or a particular time period.
Homotaxy refers to a type of poetic device in which words or phrases that have a similar sound or rhythm are used in close proximity to each other, often to create a musical or lyrical effect.
Homothallism refers to the ability of an organism or cell to exhibit both male and female characteristics simultaneously, typically resulting in self-fertilization. This phenomenon is common in certain species of fungi, such as yeast, and can also be found in some plants.
A homothety is a transformation in geometry that scales a shape up or down by a certain factor, while keeping its orientation and shape unchanged.
Homothumadon is a genus of theropod dinosaurs that lived during the Early Cretaceous period, around 125-100 million years ago. The name "homothumadon" comes from the Greek words "homos" meaning "same" and "thumada" meaning "anger" or "rage", which refers to the fact that the fossil remains of this dinosaur were found in a state of great violence, suggesting that it may have died as a result of a violent event.
Homotonous refers to something that is of the same tone or pitch. In the context of music, homotonous harmony refers to a harmony where all the notes sound the same pitch.
Homotopic refers to a mathematical concept where two curves or contours in a topological space are continuously deformable into one another without tearing or gluing. In other words, two curves are homotopic if one can be transformed into the other by continuous stretching and bending without crossing any boundaries or singularities.
Homotopy is a mathematical concept used in topology and geometry to describe a continuous deformation of a shape or a space, without cutting or gluing parts together. In essence, two shapes are said to be homotopically equivalent if one can be transformed into the other through a continuous process, without any sudden changes or discontinuities.