See also: Homolog

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Etymology edit

Borrowed from French homologue, From Ancient Greek ὁμόλογος (homólogos, agreeing, of one mind), equivalent to homo +‎ -log.

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Noun edit

homolog (plural homologs)

  1. Something homologous; a homologous organ or part, chemical compound or chromosome.
    • 2008, Chan-seok Jeong, Minho Lee, Dongsup Kim, edited by Ratko Magjarevic, World Congress of Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering 2006, Volume 1[1] (Biomedical Engineering), →ISBN, page 171:
      Detecting remote homolog by protein similarity network.
  2. (linguistics) A word shared by two languages or dialects.
  3. (genetics) One of a group of similar DNA sequences that share a common ancestry.
  4. (organic chemistry) A member of a homologous series.

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Adjective edit

homolog (strong nominative masculine singular homologer, not comparable)

  1. homologous (all senses)

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