Are the dominant forces in the human germinative cells those which bring a contribution of beauty?
Such hybrids of the first generation, therefore, although apparently similar to the parent with red flowers, differ in their germinative powers, which are not made apparent in the individual.
Organically they do not rise above tissues which, in the higher vegetables, are formed in the embryonic sac of the ovary, and precede the germinative development of the new individual.
Footnote 152: In dolls of the Corn-maids this germinative symbol is often found made of wood and mounted on an elaborate tablet representing rain-clouds.
The germinative capacity of a sample of barley may frequently be raised by sweating (see below), which, as already mentioned, brings about a kind of artificial maturation.
Moreover, unripe corn may to a certain extent be matured in stack, whilst a great improvement in germinative capacity is frequently produced by sweating.
Barley should not be cut until it is properly ripe, but over-ripeness is much more to be guarded against by the maltster than premature cutting, as it is accompanied by a loss in germinative power.
They are said to retain theirgerminative powers ten years; but, by seedsmen, are not considered reliable when more than five years old.
An ounce contains from nine hundred to eleven hundred seeds; and they retain their germinative properties from eight to ten years.
About six hundred seeds, or pods, are contained in an ounce; and they retain their germinative powers three years.
The seeds are large, black, wrinkled, irregular in form, and retain their germinative properties three years.
The seeds, which are produced in globular, scarlet berries, are black, somewhat triangular, and retain their germinative powers four years.
The seeds are brown, exceedingly small, and retain their germinative properties three years.
One hundred and five thousand are contained in an ounce, and they retain their germinative properties three years.
The female germinative cell, on the contrary, is immobile and much larger than the male cell.
It then becomes inert matter, and the germinative cells alone of all its parts continue its life under certain conditions.
The history of the discovery of germinative foliations in the embryonic development of vertebrates forms one of the most impressive of human documents.
At the same time, the oval form of the germinative area returns to a circular shape, and the inner pellucid area separates more clearly from the opaque outer area (Figure 1.
These four secondary germinal layers can be clearly distinguished as soon as what is called the sickle-groove (or "embryonic sickle") is seen at the hind border of the germinative area.
The ditch consists of the outer part of the germinative area, and comes to an end at the point where the area passes into the vesicle.
As the two outer layers of the germinative area thus rise in a fold about the embryo, and join above it, they come at last to form a spacious sac-like membrane about it.
We may now disregard both the outer ovolemma and the greater part of the vesicle, and concentrate our attention on the germinative area and the four-layered embryonic disk.
The germinative area forms in the human embryo in the same way as in the other mammals, and in the middle part of this we have the embryonic shield, the purport of which we considered in Chapter 1.
Remak further proved that this middle layer, which he calls "the motor-germinative layer," proceeds to subdivide into two secondary layers.
Thus, the first blood-vessels pass over the embryonic body and reach as far as the edge of the germinative area.
Sometimes it has been called the germinal disk, sometimes the germinal spot, and usually the germinative area.
Sandal-shaped embryonic shield of a rabbit of eight days, with the fore part of the germinative area (ao opaque, ap pellucid area).
It now has the appearance of a thick, oval swelling, strongly curved over the surface of the germinative area.
By means of the germinative affinity, every gemmule (except in cases of anomalies or monstrosities) can be developed only in cells homologous with the mother-cells of the cell from which they originated.
The existence of the gemmules is a first unknown element; the propagative affinity of the gemmules is a second; theirgerminative affinity is a third; their multiplication by fission is a fourth--and what an unknown element!
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "germinative" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: embryonic; fetal; germinal