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coelenterate vs medusa

medusa vs coelenterate

coelenterate and medusa both are nouns.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
coelenterate Yes No No No
medusa Yes No No No
As nouns, medusa is a hyponym of coelenterate; that is, medusa is a word with a more specific, narrower meaning than coelenterate:
  • coelenterate: radially symmetrical animals having saclike bodies with only one opening and tentacles with stinging structures; they occur in polyp and medusa forms
  • medusa: one of two forms that coelenterates take: it is the free-swimming sexual phase in the life cycle of a coelenterate; in this phase it has a gelatinous umbrella-shaped body and tentacles
Other hyponyms of coelenterate include polyp, medusan, medusoid, jellyfish, scyphozoan, hydroid, hydrozoan, actinozoan, anthozoan.
coelenterate (noun) medusa (noun)
radially symmetrical animals having saclike bodies with only one opening and tentacles with stinging structures; they occur in polyp and medusa forms one of two forms that coelenterates take: it is the free-swimming sexual phase in the life cycle of a coelenterate; in this phase it has a gelatinous umbrella-shaped body and tentacles
Difference between coelenterate and medusa

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