An organism or entity that moves or behaves like an amoeba, or a person who studies amoebas.
From 'amoeba' (a single-celled organism) plus the agent suffix '-er' (indicating one who does something or something that possesses a quality). This is a constructed term combining the organism name with common English word formation patterns.
While 'amober' isn't a standard scientific term, it nicely captures something real: many single-celled organisms move with the same flowing, shape-changing behavior as amoebas, making them functionally 'amoeba-like' even if they're not true amoebas.
Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.