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Definition of Mendelianism
1. Noun. The theory of inheritance based on Mendel's laws.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mendelianism
Literary usage of Mendelianism
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1904)
"*The Relation between the Law of Ancestral Heredity and Mendelianism: FRANK E.
LUTZ. (Read by title.) The 'purity of the germ' idea applies quite as well to ..."
2. Biological Bulletin by Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole, Mass.) (1912)
"Though always critical of Mendelianism, he nevertheless admitted that he had
observed phenomena which, at one time, before Mendel's law came to ..."
3. The Dial edited by Francis Fisher Browne (1916)
"... and in fact ignoring Mendelianism altogether, Mr. Ludovici now proceeds to
cite his few adopted scientists in proof of the supreme necessity for ..."
4. Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science by Kansas Academy of Science (1908)
"Many advocates of Mendelianism try to explain the inheritance of body-building
and body-using instincts from two lines of ancestors, that of the father and ..."
5. Botanical Abstracts by Board of Control of Botanical Abstracts (1921)
"The Mendelianism of migraine. Med. Rec. 98:807-808. 1920.—Heredity is defined in
the Mendelian sense as applied to a disease and it is shown that migraine ..."
6. Heredity and Eugenics: A Course of Lectures Summarizing Recent Advances in by William Ernest Castle (1912)
"The elements of Mendelianism as they apply to animals have already been discussed.
In taking up some of the important neo-Mendelian facts as they are found ..."