Like other Protozoa the Radiolaria are unicellular organisms, the whole fully developed organisation of which falls under the category of a single cell, bothmorphologically and physiologically.
The central capsule and the extracapsulum are therefore to be regarded both morphologically and physiologically as the two characteristic co-ordinated principal parts of the unicellular Radiolarian organism.
The two forms of pseudopodia which we distinguish as myxopodia and axopodia differ markedly from each other both morphologically and physiologically.
The case is morphologically of great interest and must undoubtedly have a bearing on the problems of the mechanics of Division.
If they arise on the anterior surface of the normal appendage, their morphologically posterior surfaces will be adjacent, and so on.
We have found that one pair of these organs forms the "spring" of the Podura, and that in these insects it is three jointed, and thus is morphologically a pair of legs soldered together at their base.
Morphologically the development of man is more accentuated than that of woman.
Morphologically men are the more unstable element of society, and this instability expresses itself in the two extremes of genius and idiocy.
There are some anthropologists, as Manouvrier and others, who even seek to prove that woman is morphologically more highly developed than man.
Duckworth says: "When we compare the two sexes, we find that there is no constant difference that lets one sex appear morphologically superior to the other.
For these and many other anatomical reasons, I consider the tribe of Molluscs (in spite of the high physiological development of its most perfect forms) to be morphologically the lowest among the four higher tribes of animals.
The former is morphologically the more primitive condition, and is found in the overwhelming majority of birds, including many Passeriformes.
This portion, morphologically the original, was named the "accessory semitendinosus" with the symbol Y; the other portion descends on the hinder aspect of the leg and joins the fascia of the inner femoral head of the gastrocnemius muscle.
This pad varies much; it is morphologically the homologue of the pair of basiventral elements which by their lateral extension give origin to the corresponding ribs.
Its multifarious forms point to a common origin, not only morphologically but also historically.
Morphologically however, the spikelet is not homologous to those parts of other grasses which have the same name.
The animals from Fairfield, Utah County, are closer geographically to the type locality of albicaudatus than any other series, but morphologically are the least like topotypes.
Morphologically the animals from Wellsville, Cache County, were the closest to the topotypes of any obtained and are nearly indistinguishable from them.
Between these two kinds of markings there is, however, no sharp boundary, and morphologically they can scarcely be separated.
The wider two stages of a species differ in structure, the less does correlation become possible; the nearer the two stages are morphologically related, the more powerful does the action of correlation become.
The walls of this yolk-sack are morphologically a specially developed part of the mesenteron.
The spermatic cells originate from cells indistinguishable from the primitive ova, so that the fusion which takes place is the fusion of morphologically similar parts in the two sexes.
These bodies are formed directly from the protoplasm of the ovum, and are to be compared both morphologically and physiologically with the yolk-spherules of such an ovum as that of the Bird.
In Prorhyncus there is no separate vitellarium, but the lower part of the ovarian tube functionally and morphologically replaces it.
This is true; but specific characters are surface characters in fact: a species morphologically is merely the form in which a kind or genus presents itself.
The cysts, then, belong morphologically to the peridium or sporangium wall.
Closely relatedmorphologically and physiologically to the alimentary canal is the vascular system of the vertebrate, the chief sections of which develop from the fibrous gut-layer.
This of itself proves morphologically the descent of man from the ape.
He showed that the two layers of cells from which the body of this zoophyte is developed correspond, both morphologically and physiologically, to the two original germinal layers of the vertebrate.
Eriksson found, for example, that the well-known species Puccinia graminis could be split up into a number of forms which though morphologically similar were physiologically distinct.
The careful investigations of recent years have shown that in several groups of fungi we cannot be content to distinguish as units morphologically different species, but we are compelled to go deeper and analyse further the species.
Gegenbaur distinguishes homologous or morphologically equivalent structures from such as are analogous or physiologically equivalent, just as did Owen and the older anatomists.
Exclusive regard for their physiological functions would place morphologically related organs in different categories.
It does not follow because these organs bear anthers that they are morphologically true stamens.
Perhaps not, for descriptive purposes, but morphologically it would not be easy to separate such a tube from the receptacle.
The two germ nuclei which enter into the formation of the first mitotic figure of the developing egg are not only physiologically equivalent, but, at the time of their union in the egg, are usually morphologically identical.
Each of these short tubes is morphologically a nephric tubule, which, however, in correlation with its shortness, is without the turns and twists so characteristic of such tubules generally.
The widely gaping buccal funnel is morphologically an inpushing of the outer skin, i.
The great majority of the bacteria differ so little morphologically from the chromacea that we can only distinguish these two classes of monera by the difference in their metabolism.
However, the latter is by no means a real, chemically and morphologically distinct, nucleus.
Inorganic crystals correspond morphologically to the simplest (unnucleated) forms of the organic cells.
However, the distinction between these substances is quite arbitrary, and neither chemically nor morphologically well defined.
The great majority of the protists are, in the developed condition, as actual individuals, equivalent morphologically to real nucleated cells.
In addition to solitary unicellular organisms, we know of others living in colonies of which the constituent units or cells (each of them equivalent to a unicellular organism) are morphologically and physiologically identical.
The predictable nasalization--marked by a tilde in the text--has not been included in the translation unless the presence of nasalization is morphologically significant; e.
For example, the preterit permissive form, described by Collado as redomo after a preterit verb, is cross-listed as -ta redomo in order to bring together morphologically similar forms.
The Wolffian duct appears to usmorphologically to correspond in part to the segmental duct[442], or what Fuerbringer would call the duct of the head-kidney.
The further changes in the cartilages of the pectoral limb are, morphologically speaking, not important, and are easily understood by reference to Pl.
The spermatic cells originate from cells (in the case of Vertebrates at least) identical with the primitive ova, so that the fusion which takes place is the fusion of morphologically similar parts in the two sexes.
It can therefore not be compared morphologically with the gills of other fishes, nor with the pseudobranchiae, but rather with the external gills of larval sharks.
The substance of which they are formed corresponds morphologically to the enamel of ordinary teeth.
We thus find, as was first pointed out by Lockhart Clarke, that the anterior and posterior fissures of the spinal cord are, morphologically speaking, entirely different.
The splanchnopleure also envelops it, so that, morphologically speaking, the yolk lies within the mesenteron.
The whole of the yolk-cells, after the separation of the mesoblast, are however morphologically part of the hypoblast.
All structures morphologically equivalent with the leaf are now included under the general term phyllome (leaf-structure).
When we contemplate the morphologically medial man, he seems to stand as a symbol of unlimited universal progress.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "morphologically" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.