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ecosystem
[ee-koh-sis-tuhm, ek-oh-]
noun
Ecology., a system, or a group of interconnected elements, formed by the interaction of a community of organisms with their environment.
Aquatic ecosystems differ radically from their terrestrial counterparts.
any system or network of interconnecting and interacting parts, as in a business.
The success of Apple’s ecosystem depends on hardware/software integration.
Manufacturers, retailers, and customers are all part of the automotive industry’s ecosystem.
ecosystem
/ ˈɛkəʊ-, ˈiːkəʊˌsɪstəm /
noun
ecology a system involving the interactions between a community of living organisms in a particular area and its nonliving environment
ecosystem
A community of organisms together with their physical environment, viewed as a system of interacting and interdependent relationships and including such processes as the flow of energy through trophic levels and the cycling of chemical elements and compounds through living and nonliving components of the system.
ecosystem
A collection of living things and the environment in which they live. For example, a prairie ecosystem includes coyotes, the rabbits on which they feed, and the grasses that feed the rabbits.
Word History and Origins
Origin of ecosystem1
Word History and Origins
Origin of ecosystem1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
“But I’ve never experienced this level of impact as it relates to pressures coming from all sides of the housing ecosystem.”
“It’s a very fragile little ecosystem that we’re a part of here.”
He said it was a "very, very difficult period" for the aquatic ecosystem.
"It's an ecosystem that the business owners of the Chinese community depend on," he said.
But I definitely find that there is beauty in human relationships or in personal relationships, in relationships with your personal, universal, cosmic or internal ecosystem, with paradoxes, with what is opposed.
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