morphism

Etymology
Generalised from, etc.

Noun

 * 1)  (formally) An arrow in a category; (less formally) an abstraction that generalises a map from one mathematical object to another and is structure-preserving in a way that depends on the branch of mathematics from which it arises.
 * 2) * 1982, Israel Program for Scientific Translations (translator), Lev J. Leifman (editor of translation), N. N. Čencov, Statistical Decision Rules and Optimal Inference,, Translations of Mathematical Monographs, Volume 53, page 50,
 * 1° The composition of two morphisms is defined if and only if the final object of the first morphism is the initial object of the second. This composition is also a morphism, whose initial object is the initial object of the first morphism and whose final object is the final object of the second.
 * 1) * 1992, Terrance Brown (translator), Gil Henriques, Chapter 13: Morphisms and Transformations in the Construction of Invariants, Terrance Brown (translator), Jean Piaget, Gil Henriques, Edgar Ascher (editors), Morphisms and Categories: Comparing and Transforming, page 198,
 * In certain extreme cases in mathematics, the synthesis of morphisms and of transformations is so intimate that one can speak of a veritable fusion.Essentially, categories are sets of morphisms organized into operatory systems.
 * 1)  Being or having distinct variants of a plant or animal species in the same locale; polymorphism.
 * 1)  Being or having distinct variants of a plant or animal species in the same locale; polymorphism.

Translations

 * Bashkir: морфизм
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Czech: morfismus
 * Danish: morfi
 * Dutch:
 * Finnish: morfismi
 * French:
 * German: Morphismus
 * Icelandic: mótun
 * Italian: morfismo
 * Japanese: 型射,
 * Kazakh: морфизм
 * Korean:
 * Kyrgyz: морфизм
 * Latin: morphismus
 * Persian:
 * Portuguese: morfismo
 * Russian:
 * Spanish: morfismo
 * Ukrainian: морфізм
 * Welsh: morffedd


 * Danish: morfi
 * Dutch:
 * Finnish: morfismi
 * Portuguese: morfismo