BUKU BASA INGGRIS KAKAIT KARO «FISSIPARISM»
Temukaké kagunané saka
fissiparism ing pilihan bibliografi iki. Buku kang kakait dening
fissiparism lan pethikan cekak kang padha kanggo nyediyakaké panggunané ing sastra Basa Inggris.
First, there is spontaneous division, technically called fissiparism, or fission. By
this process the animal divides itself into two equal parts, each part becoming an
exact resemblance of the original and primitive individual, so that literally the
child ...
Alfred Moquin-Tandon, 1882
2
The world of the sea, tr. and enlarged by H.M. Hart, from ...
First, there is spontaneous division, technically called fissiparism, or fission, By
this process the animal divides itself into two equal parts, each part becoming an
exact resemblance of the original and primitive individual, so that literally the
child ...
Christian Horace B. Alfred Moquin-Tandon, Henry Martyn Hart, 1869
3
THE OCEAN WORLD Life and Wonders
First, there is spontaneous division, technically called fissiparism, ox fission. By
this process the animal divides itself into two equal parts, each part becoming an
exact resemblance of the original and primitive individual, so that literally the ...
4
The Century Dictionary: An Encyclopedic Lexicon of the ...
[NL., neut. pi. of fissiparus: see fissiparous.] In zobl., a collective term applied to
fissiparous animals, or organisms which propagate by fission or spontaneous self
-division: it has no specific classifi- catory signification. fissiparism (fi-sip'a-rizm), ...
William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin Eli Smith, 1914
5
The Century dictionary and cyclopedia: a work of universal ...
[NL., neut. pi. of fissiparus: see fissiparous.] In zool., a collective term applied to
fissiparous animals, or organisms which propagate by fission or spontaneous self
-division : it has no specific classifi- catory signification. fissiparism (fi-sip'a-rizm),
...
William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin Eli Smith, 1906
6
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
[NL., neut. pi. of fissiparus: see fissiparous.] In zool., a collective term applied to
fissiparous animals, or organisms which propagate by fission or spontaneous self
-division: it has no specific classifi- catory signification. fissiparism (fi-sip'a-rizm), ...
7
A Glossary of Botanic Terms: With Their Derivation and Accent
Flsslpar'lty = Fissiparism. Floral-leaf, suggested equivalent for the Germ. "
Hochblatt" ; a bract. fluorescigen'ic ( + Fluorescence, yirot, offspring), causing
fluorescence, as certain bacteria. Fo'liole, Fol'iola, add, (2) employed by Spruce
for the ...
Benjamin Daydon Jackson, 1900
8
The Progress of Invention in the Nineteenth Century
Their method of multiplication is by fissiparism —that is to sa_\'. each splits into
two independent beings that separate and afterwards lead independent lives. It is
said that there is one species in which not more than six or seven minutes are ...
9
A dictionary of new medical terms, a suppl. to 'An ...
Fish-spine Disease. See Disease, Fish-slime. Fish-tongue. See Carp* s-fongue.
Fissiparism, Fissiparity ( /is-ip'-ar-izm,fis-ip-ar/-it-e) \Jindere, to cleave; parere, to
produce]. Propagation by fission ; fissiparous generation. Fissure. (See Illus. Diet.
) ...
George Milbry Gould, 1905
10
The Transactions of the Medical Society of the State of ...
There are at present three different methods of reproduction acknowledged: First
— Fissiparism, or reproduction by division of the parent. Second — Gemmation
or budding. Third — Ovulation. Most, if not all species which are propagated by ...
Medical Society of the State of California, 1878