Therefore she prayed to God to change the male embryoin her womb into a female, and God hearkened unto her prayer.
He woundeth and He healeth, He formeth the embryo in the womb of the mother and bringeth it forth into the world, He causeth the plants and the trees to grow, He killeth and He maketh alive, He bringeth down to Sheol and bringeth up.
In his aged hand he held a wand, Wherewith he beckoned his embryo band, And they moved and moved as he waved it o'er, But they never get on one inch the more.
Under this tribal community is the embryo of the village community, consisting of smaller tenantry and cottar serfs, who live together in minute villages, holding their land in common and yearly distributing the holdings by lot.
A few of them show the plump form of an embryo apple: I think there are a score of such promises.
If one cuts across the ovary or embryo fruit below the recurving sepals, one will see under a lens that it is neatly five-celled (Fig.
It is down these style-branches that the pollen-tube passes on its way to the ovules or embryo seeds.
We have no reason to suppose that a human embryo knows that it wants to grow into a baby, or a baby into a man.
E was an Embryo in a glass case; And F a Foramen that pierced the skull's base.
Nothing in his curriculum puzzled our embryo physician so much as the different methods of treatment advocated by his teachers.
It was felt that he had somewhat exceeded the natural hilarity of an embryo surgeon, and he was advised to migrate.
Having the embryo or ovule oblique or transverse to the funiculus; amphitropous.
A short cord which connects the embryo of some myriapods with the amnion.
There is, however, an embryo Indian war in this claim, unless judiciously managed.
Probably the time of growth of the embryo and of the ripening of the seed correspond exactly to the period of highest sensibility.
First come those that have influenced the young germs of the plant during its most sensitive period, when still an embryo within the ripening seed.
In orchids and aroids, in grasses and sedges, reduction plays a most important part, leaving its traces on the flowers as well as on the embryo of the seed.
Embryo of the amphioxus, twenty hours old, with five somites.
The famous anatomist Meckel spoke in 1821 of a "similarity between the development of the embryo and the series of animals.
The first blood-vessels of the mammal embryo have been considered by us previously, and we shall study the development of the heart in the second volume.
Afterwards it is the yelk-sac, or the remainder of the embryonic vesicle, that seems a small pouch-like appendage of the embryo (Figure 1.
In these cases we may draw our conclusions with the utmost security as to the nature of the ancestral form from the features of the form which the embryo momentarily assumes.
Moreover, the human sandal-shaped embryo cannot at this stage be distinguished from those of other mammals, and it particularly resembles that of the rabbit.
Sagittal section of a hooded-embryo (depula) of triton (blastula at the commencement of gastrulation).
The number increases as the embryo grows and extends backwards, and new cells are formed constantly (at the primitive mouth) from the two primitive mesodermic cells (Figures 1.
We may take the opportunity to make a few general observations on the first circulation in the embryo and its central organ, the heart.
Blood-cells, multiplying by direct division, from the blood of the embryo of a stag.
For their hypothesis of the formation of the embryo from commixture of blood being wholly false, their opinion in this case must of necessity be likewise.
A man went into an embryo city, consisting in that day of two or three thousand town lots, and from fifty to a hundred inhabitants, with an iron box costing twenty-five dollars.
If there was any one place more than another calculated to educate and instruct an embryo clergyman in the ways of the world, and a particularly wicked world at that, it was Oshkosh before the war.
A column wouldn't scratch the surface of this book," suggested the embryo reviewer.
It was this consciousness of a void ready to be filled that made the Philadelphia experiment so attractive to the embryo editor.
Here speaks the High Priest of Knowledge, here quivers the helpless embryo of the humanity which is to come.
One day, when looking at the embryo of a sprouting walnut under the microscope, he saw two little white hands folded as if in prayer.
In the same way, the embryo of man in the womb of the mother was at first in a strange form; then this body passes from shape to shape, from state to state, from form to form, until it appears in utmost beauty and perfection.
Nevertheless, from the beginning of the embryonic period he is of the species of man—that is to say, an embryo of a man and not of an animal; but this is not at first apparent, but later it becomes visible and evident.
So, if the embryo of man in the womb of the mother passes from one form to another so that the second form in no way resembles the first, is this a proof that the species has changed?
The embryo in the womb of the mother gradually grows and develops until birth, after which it continues to grow and develop until it reaches the age of discretion and maturity.
But even when in the womb of the mother and in this strange form, entirely different from his present form and figure, he is the embryo of the superior species, and not of the animal; his species and essence undergo no change.
The seed does not at once become a tree; the embryo does not at once become a man; the mineral does not suddenly become a stone.
No, as before mentioned, it is merely like the change and alteration of the embryo of man until it reaches the degree of reason and perfection.
There is no doubt that the human embryo did not at once appear in this form; neither did it then become the manifestation of the words “Blessed, therefore, be God, the most excellent of Makers.
Man is an embryo god and, in time, he shall evolve faculties and powers that his present limited consciousness can not even comprehend.
A] If the idea of the immanence of God is sound man, as a literal fragment of the consciousness of the Supreme Being, is an embryo god, destined to ultimately evolve his latent powers into perfect expression.
When the middle and hinder regions of the blastopore are closing in, an equatorial ridge of ciliated cells is formed, converting the embryo into a typical trochosphere.
But in these epibolic forms, just as in the embolic Paludina, the embryo proceeds to develop its ciliated band and shell-gland, passing through the earlier condition of a trochosphere to that of the veliger.
Such cannulated cells are characteristic of the nephridia of many worms, and the organs thus formed in the embryo Limnaeus are embryonic nephridia.
Similar rhythmically contractile areas are found on the foot of the embryo Pulmonate Limax and on the yolk-sac (distended foot-surface) of the Cephalopod Loligo.
D, Embryo with lateral torsion and an endogastric shell.
The external form of the embryo goes through the same changes as in other Gastropods, and is not, as was held previously to Lankester's observations, exceptional.
In Limnaeus the permanent shell is preceded in the embryo by a well-marked shell-gland or primitive shell-sac (fig.
The fruit is generally a membranous or leathery capsule, splitting septicidally into two valves; the seeds are small and numerous, and contain a small embryo in a copious endosperm.
The preconchylian invagination or shell-gland is formed in the embryo behind the velum, on the surface opposite the blastopore.
Embryo of Limnaeus stagnalis, at a stage when the Trochosphere is developing foot and shell-gland and becoming a Veliger, seen as a transparent object under slight pressure.
The foot is always simple, with its flat crawling surface extending from end to end, but in the embryo Limnaea it shows a bilobed character, which leads on to the condition characteristic of Pteropoda.
And as for his attitude toward the army, Mike best expressed himself with a small embryo ulcer which he kept always on the verge of eruption within twenty-four hours notice to report for a draft board examination.
It was rumored that, through a swift, sufficient amount of whisky, Mike could make his embryo ulcer dance angrily for the draft medicos at any time.
The term monocotyledon is applied to these plants because the embryo has only one cotyledon or seed-leaf.
The class receives its name from the presence of two cotyledons or seed-leaves in the embryo plant, and is also known as the Exogenae because the stems increase in thickness by the addition of zones of woody tissue at the exterior.
When the ovules have been fertilised by the pollen, they develop into seeds, each one of which contains an embryo plant; and the ovary itself, ripening at the same time, develops into the fruit.
The chief distinguishing feature of these is that implied in the above names, the embryo of the former containing but one rudimentary leaf (cotyledon), while that of the latter contains two.
Admirably, I must say, considering that this is Aunt Mary's first attempt at taming anembryo lord of the creation.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "embryo" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: bud; egg; germ; larva; nucleus; nymph; rudiment; seed; spark; spermatozoon