Definition of Syngamic

1. syngamy [adj] - See also: syngamy

Lexicographical Neighbors of Syngamic

synes
syneses
synesis
synesises
synesthesia
synesthesias
synesthete
synesthetes
synesthetic
synesthetic metaphor
synezesis
synfuel
synfuels
syngameon
syngameons
syngamic (current term)
syngamies
syngamous
syngamy
syngas
syngases
syngenecious
syngeneic
syngeneic transplantation
syngenesious
syngenetic
syngenic
syngenite

Literary usage of Syngamic

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and (1910)
"Amoeba shows also the multiplication by fission, so characteristic of the cell: for the study of other modes of reproduction, spore formation and syngamic ..."

2. The Cambridge Natural History by Arthur Everett Shipley, Sidney Frederic Harmer (1906)
"... has discovered and worked out true syngamic processes, some bisexual, some exogamous, in several other ..."

3. The Encyclopedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and by Hugh Chisholm (1911)
"... famous as " the thu< " nucleus," ,-f nuclei form a single nucleus in syngamic processes (see REPRODUCTION); ) the process of pairing in Infusoria (if.r. ..."

4. The Entomologist's Monthly Magazine by Nathaniel Lloyd and Company (1864)
"... and the attempt was made to show that the conception of a naturally and freely interbreeding (or syngamic) community lies behind the usual definitions ..."

5. A Textbook of General Embryology by William Erskine Kellicott (1913)
"... brood formation, parthenogenesis, development from spores, and so forth; and "sexual" reproduction would also follow many forms of syngamic fusion. ..."

6. Protozoölogy by Gary Nathan Calkins (1909)
"FIG. 57 1 Ameba Umax. Nucleus in upper cell in full mitosis; in lower cell (right) in anaphase of the mitosis. syngamic nuclear ..."

7. Protozoölogy by Gary Nathan Calkins (1909)
"In this lowest group of animal forms we find every grade in complexity in the sequence of syngamic processes, from those of undoubtedly primitive character ..."

8. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and (1910)
"Amoeba shows also the multiplication by fission, so characteristic of the cell: for the study of other modes of reproduction, spore formation and syngamic ..."

9. The Cambridge Natural History by Arthur Everett Shipley, Sidney Frederic Harmer (1906)
"... has discovered and worked out true syngamic processes, some bisexual, some exogamous, in several other ..."

10. The Encyclopedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and by Hugh Chisholm (1911)
"... famous as " the thu< " nucleus," ,-f nuclei form a single nucleus in syngamic processes (see REPRODUCTION); ) the process of pairing in Infusoria (if.r. ..."

11. The Entomologist's Monthly Magazine by Nathaniel Lloyd and Company (1864)
"... and the attempt was made to show that the conception of a naturally and freely interbreeding (or syngamic) community lies behind the usual definitions ..."

12. A Textbook of General Embryology by William Erskine Kellicott (1913)
"... brood formation, parthenogenesis, development from spores, and so forth; and "sexual" reproduction would also follow many forms of syngamic fusion. ..."

13. Protozoölogy by Gary Nathan Calkins (1909)
"FIG. 57 1 Ameba Umax. Nucleus in upper cell in full mitosis; in lower cell (right) in anaphase of the mitosis. syngamic nuclear ..."

14. Protozoölogy by Gary Nathan Calkins (1909)
"In this lowest group of animal forms we find every grade in complexity in the sequence of syngamic processes, from those of undoubtedly primitive character ..."

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