Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun One who studies embryos; one versed in the principles and facts or engaged in the study of embryology.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun One skilled in embryology.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun An expert or specialist in
embryology
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun a physician who specializes in embryology
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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British embryologist Robert Edwards won the 2010 Nobel Prize in Medicine for developing in vitro fertilization.
What's News 2010
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Robert Edwards, a feisty British embryologist who fundamentally transformed human procreation, received the 2010 Nobel Prize in Medicine Monday for the development of clinical in vitro fertilization.
Robert G. Edwards Wins Nobel Prize for Medicine Robert Lee Hotz 2010
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And any Christian will tell you that life begins at conception … and just about any biologist/embryologist as well.
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"He understood this morning that he was finally awarded the prize, and he was smiling plenty when his wife, Ruth, gave him the news," said embryologist Jacques Cohen, the senior editor of Reproductive Biomedicine Online, which Dr. Edwards founded.
Robert G. Edwards Wins Nobel Prize for Medicine Robert Lee Hotz 2010
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And any Christian will tell you that life begins at conception … and just about any biologist/embryologist as well.
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Pregnancy rates were low and miscarriage rates were fairly high, said Amy Jones, the clinical embryologist at Nashville Fertility Center.
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Waddington was a developmental biologist, paleontologist, geneticist, embryologist and philosopher who laid the foundations for systems biology.
Capsule Summaries of the Great Books of the Western World Jonathan Aquino 2009
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The Nobel Prize in medicine went to Robert Edwards, the British embryologist who developed clinical in vitro fertilization, while the physics prize went to a pair of Russian-born scientists for a new form of carbon that could someday replace silicon in electronics.
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Waddington was a developmental biologist, paleontologist, geneticist, embryologist and philosopher who laid the foundations for systems biology.
Archive 2009-03-01 Jonathan Aquino 2009
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February 4th, 2010 at 11: 06 pm belaccifer lacca says: and just about any biologist/embryologist as well.
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