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embryonically การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Embryonically the gastrosplenic ligament is derived from the dorsal mesogastrium.
  • The site of their meeting remains post-embryonically as the median sulcus of the tongue.
  • *The giant salamander fits the bill . embryonically it has gills, which it loses.
  • Embryonically-transcribed hunchback protein is able to exhibit the same effects on Kr黳pel and knirps as maternally-transcribed hunchback.
  • His style, while embryonically frenetic and searching, was not quite the sheets of sound approach celebrated later in the decade.
  • Ten Kate's anthropological knowledge gathered over several decades of travel was considered as " embryonically modern " attesting to his scientific stature.
  • Both embryonically-transcribed hunchback and maternally-transcribed hunchback are activated by bicoid protein in the anterior and is inhibited in the posterior by nanos protein.
  • The deletion of the gene in mouse models was shown to be embryonically lethal, thus indicating that it is important for vasculogenesis and blood vessel development.
  • Prospero is post-embryonically upregulated in order to promote neurons to exit the cell cycle, after GMCs differentiate during the embryogenesis Prospero is nearly undectectable.
  • The murine Fat1 knockout mouse is not embryonically lethal but pups die within 48-hours due to the abnormal fusion of foot processes of the podocytes within the kidney.
  • True leaves, however, are formed post-embryonically ( i . e . after germination ) from the shoot apical meristem, which is responsible for generating subsequent aerial portions of the plant.
  • The whole process of an evolutionary mechanism in which the gills could be lost while the lungs developed seems kind of complex, because IIRC the gills are not evolutionarily homologous ( or embryonically homologous ) to lungs.
  • Locke's " Second Treatise " also points towards the heart of the anti-mercantilist critique : that the wealth of the world is not fixed, but is created by human labor ( represented embryonically by Locke's labor theory of value ).
  • First, because it tells us something about the primal origin of all things; second, because it does so in language devoid of image or fable, and finally, because contained in it, if only embryonically, is the thought,'all things are one . '"
  • Recently, several heterozygous missense human NOG mutations in unrelated families with proximal symphalangism ( SYM1 ) and multiple synostoses syndrome ( SYNS1 ) have been identified; both SYM1 and SYNS1 have multiple joint fusion as their principal feature, and map to the same region on chromosome 17 ( 17q22 ) as NOG . These mutations indicate functional haploinsufficiency where the homozygous forms are embryonically lethal.
  • The raising of is also present in Ulster English, spoken in the northern region of the island of Ireland, in which is split between the sound ( before voiced consonants or in final position ) and the sound ( before voiceless consonants but also sometimes in any position ); phonologist Raymond Hickey has described this Ulster raising as " embryonically the situation " for Canadian raising.
  • Louis Green asserts that Giovanni's " Cronica " expressed the outlook of the merchant community in Florence at the time, but also provided valuable indications of " how that outlook was modified in a direction away from characteristically medieval to embryonically modern attitudes . " Green writes that Villani's " Cronica " was one of three types of chronicles found in the 14th century, the type which was largely a universal history.