How to Use genomics in a Sentence

genomics

noun
  • The more genomics data that researchers acquire, the better the prospects for personal and public health.
    Dmitri Pavlichin, IEEE Spectrum, 22 Aug. 2018
  • Now the ecosystem has moved to treatments that fuse AI, genomics, and precision medicine to improve longevity.
    Lara Setrakian, semafor.com, 10 Oct. 2025
  • The hole in the Craig Venter tributes Two weeks ago, genomics legend Craig Venter died.
    O. Rose Broderick, STAT, 15 May 2026
  • Through storytelling and humor, the podcast has made genomics research more accessible and expanded our understanding of how genomics applies and intersects with our everyday lives.
    Frank Racioppi, Forbes.com, 30 June 2026
  • Early users report substantial productivity gains on tasks ranging from literature reviews to genomics and drug discovery, according to the company.
    Jeremy Kahn, Fortune, 2 July 2026
  • Illumina became a genomics juggernaut by developing machines that could read large amounts of DNA accurately and quickly.
    Jonathan Wosen, STAT, 13 Jan. 2026
  • Wang turned to his supporters, who included a pediatrician, a genomics researcher, and a Princeton University neuroscience colleague.
    Gabriel Debenedetti, New Yorker, 13 Apr. 2026
  • The genomics team then reached out to Pall Thordarson, director of the UNSW RNA Institute.
    Bojan Stojkovski, Interesting Engineering, 15 Mar. 2026
  • The next era of biohacking will merge genomics, nanotechnology, and artificial intelligence into cohesive platforms for predictive healthcare.
    Ascend Agency, Mercury News, 2 Dec. 2025
  • Illumina, a genomics juggernaut, is betting the next phase of its growth will be accelerated by helping customers better understand genetic data and apply it to drug development, STAT tells us.
    Ed Silverman, STAT, 14 Jan. 2026
  • The public health intelligence hub, launched by experts at Georgetown University and the health company Medstar Health, is working with wastewater monitoring sites, biotech companies, genomics labs and local public health departments to stay ahead of disease threats during the matches.
    Lauren J. Young, Scientific American, 10 June 2026
  • If measles had been introduced separately to those locations, the sequences pulled from each state might more closely resemble genetic information from an international source, Pavitra Roychoudhury, a pathogen-genomics expert at the University of Washington, told me.
    Katherine J. Wu, The Atlantic, 27 Jan. 2026
  • High-Performance Or Algorithm-Intensive Workloads Healthcare’s heaviest workloads, ML training, genomics, actuarial modeling, pricing engines and real-time eligibility, demand deep hardware control and parallel compute.
    Harikrishnan Muthukrishnan, Forbes.com, 26 Jan. 2026
  • Institutions connected to the National Institutes of Health, Johns Hopkins, the University System of Maryland and the broader I-270 biotechnology corridor have helped make Maryland a major center for genomics, biotechnology, life sciences and biomedical innovation.
    Sreedhar Potarazu, Baltimore Sun, 14 June 2026

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'genomics.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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