¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Cytoplasms
1. cytoplasm [n] - See also: cytoplasm
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cytoplasms
Literary usage of Cytoplasms
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Gene Expression in Algae and Fungi Including Yeast: Bibliography January by Janet Saunders, Robert D. Warmbrodt (2001)
"cytoplasms from a number of cultivated and wild species had modifying effects on
the expression of the nuclear genes controlling quantitative resistance. ..."
2. Gene Expression in Field Crops: Bibliography January 1991-November 1992 edited by Janet Saunders, Robert D. Warmbrodt (1995)
"Effects of cultivated and wild cereal cytoplasms on the expression of the genome
... cytoplasms from a number of cultivated and wild species had modifying ..."
3. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1905)
"In fertilization the sperm and egg-cell cytoplasms fuse, but the nuclei do not
really fuse, but the chromosomes are mingled in the first ..."
4. The Cambridge Natural History by Arthur Everett Shipley, Sidney Frederic Harmer (1906)
"... while the nuclei remain distinct: they ultimately separate again. In the
conjugation of the Infusoria, the union of the cytoplasms is a ..."
5. The Physiology of Plants: A Treatise Upon the Metabolism and Sources of by Wilhelm Pfeffer (1900)
"The combination of a variety of nuclei with the same cytoplasm, or the combination
of one nucleus with different cytoplasms, would in every case originate a ..."
6. A Textbook of General Embryology by William Erskine Kellicott (1913)
"... so that the cytoplasms mingle completely; the cell nuclei remain separate,
though osmotically they may affect one another and the fused cytoplasms. ..."
7. Transactions of the Pathological Society of London by Pathological Society of London (1906)
"Some have acidophile or faintly basophil cytoplasms, and some have
neutrophilic (myelocytes) or eosinophilic granules. Cells with rather small, clear, ..."