Organism that consists of only one cell.
Sinônimos
Examples for "monad"
Examples for "monad"
1Thus two lines of thought combine in the concept of the monad.
2The microscope observes a monad or wheel-insect among the infusories circulating in water.
3It is the lowest point of the are in the monad's downward journey.
4Stahl has especially illustrated in physiology this idea of an independent soul monad.
5A monad in my fingernail feels the gravity of Titan, does it not?
1Bacteria may be defined as very minute unicellular organisms of plantlike character.
2Resilient little critters, they persevered, unicellular dots hanging on for dear life.
3The Cryptomonadaceae also are unicellular, and live free or in colonies.
4And these unicellular animals have the rudiments of all our functions.
5The spores of Monospora are by some regarded as unicellular propagula.
1If God did not create everything, how did the first single-celled organism originate?
2Weightlessness alone could not have turned a single-celled organism into this startling green mass.
3This is truly remarkable considering the fact that killer algae is a single-celled organism.
4P polycephalum is a plasmodial, single-celled organism which grows outward from a single point, searching for food sources.
5Every single-celled organism would be unfamiliar.
1The egg lived for thousands of years as an independent unicellular organism, the Amoeba.
2Inheritance must be looked at as merely a form of growth, like the self-division of a lowly-organised unicellular organism.
3The unicellular organism can by its very nature transform itself into a multicellular organism only by the method of cell-division.
4They point out that a man is made up of a great multitude of cells, each equivalent to a unicellular organism.
5The life of the amoeba or any other unicellular organism is low compared with the life in more complex organisms, like the ant or bee.
6Bacteria may be defined as very minute unicellular organisms of plantlike character.
7However, most of our understanding of translation comes from unicellular organisms and cultured mammalian cells.
8Nor does old age supervene in the unicellular organisms.
9Diatoms constitute a diverse lineage of unicellular organisms abundant and ecologically important in aquatic ecosystems.
10Cilia and flagella appeared very early in evolution to provide unicellular organisms with motility in water.
11MONERA: the most primitive of the unicellular organisms.
12Dynamic models of metabolism can be useful in identifying potential drug targets, especially in unicellular organisms.
13The protozoa, like the bacteria, are unicellular organisms and contain a nucleus as do all cells.
14The earliest unicellular organisms can only have been evolved from the simplest organisms we know, the Monera.
15There are assuredly still unicellular organisms which are, in their whole nature, really nothing more than permanent ova.
1617) are unicellular organisms and vary greatly in size, shape and capacity of growth.
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Translations for unicellular organism