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Definition of Chromatinic
1. Adjective. (of substance of a cell nucleus) readily colored by stains.
Definition of Chromatinic
1. Adjective. Of or pertaining to chromatin ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Chromatinic
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Chromatinic
Literary usage of Chromatinic
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Harvey Lectures by Harvey Society of New York, New York Academy of Medicine (1915)
"However in their staining reactions they are different, the chromatinic substance
is not differentiated from the cytoplasmic substance with the same ease, ..."
2. Microbiology: A Text-book of Microörganisms, General and Applied by Charles E. Marshall (1921)
"... posterior flagellum, forming the edge of the undulating membrane; chr.
I., "chromatinic line," forming the base of the undulating membrane; chr.b., ..."
3. The Journal of Medical Research by American Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists (1907)
"3, 6) two small darkly- stained and closely-opposed chromatinic granules ...
In one instance a well-marked chain of oblong twin chromatinic granules runs ..."
4. The Unity of the Organism; Or, The Organismal Conception of Life by William Emerson Ritter (1919)
"It is hard to imagine a developmental process in which denial of form-determining
power to non-chromatinic, even non-nuclear parts of the cell would be a ..."
5. The System of Animate Nature: The Gifford Lectures Delivered in the by John Arthur Thomson (1920)
"Suppose the chromatin globules to increase in number and then to show some
complexity of arrangement, and suppose a non-chromatinic ground-substance ..."
6. The Unity of the Organism, Or, The Organismal Conception of Life by William Emerson Ritter (1919)
"We shall have to examine these extra-chromatinic portions of the sperm more fully
when we undertake to find what substances, whether in germ or somatic ..."
7. International Medical and Surgical Surveyby American Institute of Medicine by American Institute of Medicine (1922)
"The Giemsa stain, though invaluable for blood work, must be controlled by a known
reliable chromatinic stain such as hema- toxylin. ..."
8. The Unity of the Organism; Or, The Organismal Conception of Life by William Emerson Ritter (1919)
"... it would certainly be a considerable achievement in support of the theory of
universal nuclear and chromatinic hegemony in development. ..."