¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Gynandromorphs
1. gynandromorph [n] - See also: gynandromorph
Lexicographical Neighbors of Gynandromorphs
Literary usage of Gynandromorphs
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Genetics; an Introduction to the Study of Heredity by Herbert Eugene Walter (1922)
"... secondary sexual characters fail to find the conditions necessary for their
expression in the developing soma. 9. gynandromorphs AND SEX INTERGRADES ..."
2. Experimental zoology by Thomas Hunt Morgan (1907)
"These mixed sexual individuals are known as gynandromorphs. ... The gynandromorphs
showed the male characters sometimes on the right side of the body and ..."
3. Botanical Abstracts by Board of Control of Botanical Abstracts (1920)
"gynandromorphs start as females; a striking preponderance of female parts ...
All evidence from gynandromorphs with male abdomen and testes supports these ..."
4. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1905)
"Unfortunately his statement in regard to the racial characters of the gynandromorphs
is obscure. The following quotation is the only reference that he has ..."
5. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History by American Museum of Natural History (1903)
"It is, in fact, rather surprising that the gynandromorphs of- so many ... 92,
93) have adopted the following classification of gynandromorphs: GROUP I. ..."
6. An Introduction to Zoology by Robert William Hegner (1910)
"gynandromorphs A normal colony of honeybees contains, as stated before, a fertilized,
... Abnormal insects of this kind are known as gynandromorphs. ..."
7. The Entomologist's Record and Journal of Variation by James William Tutt, Malcolm Burr (1890)
"This is to be confined to those cases in which germplasm of both sexes is present,
ie, both ovarian and testicular tissue. A number of gynandromorphs belong ..."
8. Year Book by Carnegie Institution of Washington (1919)
"From descriptions I am now convinced they were intergrades. (6) R. de la Vaulx
has found what he called 'androgynous females,' or gynandromorphs, in Daphnia ..."