What is a phylum and class?
Answer.
Phylum means one. Kind of animal, class means a part of this kind of animal. For example, the phylum Tunicate. Is a group of animals which lives in water and looks. Like a slug. The phylum Porifera, the group of the sponges and the starfish belongs to. They are a kind of jellyfish which cannot move and live in seawater. The phylum is different. From the group because the phylum includes more types of species. (animals) than the group (all those with the same ancestor). As it is not included in the group, there is no strict relation. Between the classes of the phylum and of the group. You can also imagine that the. Phylum and group have some kinds of relation like family, but. Only in the living organisms we know a group and a phylum (but. There may be some others we do not know!
What do you mean by class in biology?
Is a question that occurs from time to time here, or perhaps is it more frequent elsewhere. Sometimes I think you'll find someone that just wants to argue about it - but I want to hear what you think. I'm still studying, I don't want to lose my points - and when I get married in the near future, I don't want to take away from my bride. Please, can we stop it?
This question has been discussed in great detail in our site's forum and in other sites' forums. What is the difference between biology and biological class/science course/school? (Please specify which you are referring to!). The terms have been used as synonyms for a long time now, probably since a lot of people were in high school. But at least I've never seen the term Biological Science Course discussed except by people who want to be pedantic, usually. Most people just refer to school courses or schools in general. It's just a bit of bad terminology, and I don't think it's the real problem. The important thing here is that a lot of science class is also biology, and so it all blends together for the class.
You're probably asking the wrong question then, although I see what you're saying: "My question is 'what does the word "biology" mean?'". This is a hard one, because there is no such thing as an objective definition. You're going to have to look to your community, their conventions and rules. In the US, biology in general is usually associated with "the study of living things", and a biology course is going to be more or less "Living Things". I suspect you could look at it in a broader sense in some other contexts, but I doubt it would be very common.
But what is "biological"? You might assume that biology means genetics, since that is pretty much all people outside of the sciences talk about when they use that term. I am currently teaching a course in biology for first year students and I have to correct them regularly on what is meant by a biology. They don't know that it means the entire life of a being! They don't know that biologists study animals, plants, bacteria, and even human beings, as well. It's quite surprising how badly many students actually have a poor understanding of this.
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