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Definition of Mutual resemblance
1. Noun. Symmetrical resemblance.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mutual Resemblance
Literary usage of Mutual resemblance
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Researches Into the Physical History of Mankind by James Cowles Prichard (1847)
"Of the mutual Resemblance observed between the American Races. Europeans who
travelled among the American nations at an early period after the discovery of ..."
2. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1908)
"The conclusions reached are: (i) that the mutual resemblance of twins in mental
traits, is about twice as great as that of other siblings (about .80 as ..."
3. Lectures on Metaphysics and Logic by William Hamilton, Henry Longueville Mansel, John Veitch (1870)
"He rejects their doctrine as incomplete, because, he says, they take no account
of the mutual resemblance of the classified objects. ..."
4. Notes and comments on passages of Scripture by John Kentish (1846)
"Have they any mutual resemblance ? How, then, can the adulteration of "the finest
of the wheat" be allowable or innocent?' a Bauer, in loc. EZEKIEL. XX. 47. ..."
5. The Natural History of Man: Comprising Inquiries Into the Modifying by James Cowles Prichard (1855)
"He refers to mutual resemblance between individuals as a criterion of species;
but species itself is fundamentally, according to both these writers, ..."