Genome

The total genetic material of any organism [i.e., in humans, the 23 pairs of chromosomes that make up the genome, together with the genes they house, and a lot of DNA that does not contribute to genes (i.e., non-coding DNA)].  More specifically, it is the entire genetic complement of a prokaryote species and the haploid nuclear genetic complement of a eukaryotic species.  Each animal or plant has its own unique genome.  The originator of the term ‘genome’ was the botanist Hans Winkler (1877-1945) who derived it from combining ‘gene’ and ‘chromosome’ in 1920. 

See Caenorhabditis (C.) elegans (or nematode), Chromosome, DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), Eukaryote cell (or organism), Gene, Genomics, Genotype and phenotype, Human Connectome Project (HCP), Human Genome Project (HGP), Prokaryote cell (or organism), Sex chromosomes