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monad (n.)

1610s, "unity, arithmetical unit," 1610s, from Late Latin monas (genitive monadis), from Greek monas "unit," from monos "alone" (from PIE root *men- (4) "small, isolated"). In Leibnitz's philosophy, "an ultimate unit of being, a unit of the universal substance" (1748); he apparently adopted the word from Giordano Bruno's 16c. metaphysics, where it referred to a hypothetical primary indivisible substance at once material and spiritual. Related: Monadic; monadism.

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Definitions of monad from WordNet

monad (n.)
(chemistry) an atom having a valence of one;
monad (n.)
a singular metaphysical entity from which material properties are said to derive;
Synonyms: monas
monad (n.)
(biology) a single-celled microorganism (especially a flagellate protozoan);
From wordnet.princeton.edu