Mother Cell

Word MOTHER CELL
Character 11
Hyphenation N/A
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Mother Cell"

What do we mean by mother cell?

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word mother-cell. Define mother-cell, mother-cell synonyms, mother-cell pronunciation, mother-cell translation, English dictionary definition of mother-cell.

A cell containing every STD imaginable, including both the HIV and full blown AIDS. Urban Dictionary

Synonyms and Antonyms for Mother Cell

  • Synonyms for mother cell
  • Mother Cell synonyms not found!!!
  • Antonyms for mother cell
  • Mother Cell antonyms not found!

The word "mother-cell" in example sentences

I look upon the old society as the mother-cell which must be sustained until individuals construct the new world. ❋ David McDuff (2009)

Cell-development always takes place within existing cells, and either one or many new cells may be formed within the mother-cell. ❋ Unknown (N/A)

Inside the mother-cell were to be found young developing cells of spherical shape, lacking however a nucleus. ❋ Unknown (N/A)

The true nucleus of the cartilage cell was probably in the same way the original generator of the mother-cell. ❋ Unknown (N/A)

Each daughter-cell contracts and becomes more or less rounded, secretes a wall of its own, and by the bursting or absorption of the wall of its mother-cell becomes free. ❋ Various (N/A)

The type in all these cases is this: A mother-cell produces by cell-division four daughter-cells. ❋ Various (N/A)

Each of these parts then secretes a cell-wall and becomes free as a spore by the rupture or absorption of the wall of the mother-cell. ❋ Various (N/A)

Of each kind of gernmule a great number perishes; a great number remains in a dormant state through many generations in the bodies of descendants; the remainder germinate and reproduce the mother-cell. ❋ St. George Mivart (N/A)

The spores arise from special or mother-cells by a process of division, or it may be even termed free-cell formation, the protoplasm of each mother-cell dividing into four parts, each of which contracts, secretes ❋ Various (N/A)

The true spore or endospore begins with the appearance of a minute granule in the protoplasm of a vegetative cell; this granule enlarges and in a few hours has taken to itself all the protoplasm, secreted a thin but very resistive envelope, and is a ripe ovoid spore, smaller than the mother-cell and lying loosely in it (cf.figs. 6, 9, 10, and 11). ❋ Various (N/A)

Some of these terminal cells push out a little finger of protoplasm, which swells, thickens its wall, and becomes detached from the mother-cell as a spore, here called specially a _basidiospore_. ❋ Various (N/A)

Moreover this secretaryship can become the mother-cell of various activities which eventually will branch off -- _i. e. ❋ George Thomas Daly (1914)

~ As the cell increases in size as a result of growth, it elongates in one direction, and finally a new cell wall is formed, dividing the so-called mother-cell into two, equal-sized daughter-cells. ❋ Unknown (1910)

This 6+8 distribution has actually been observed in the pollen mother-cell in _rubrinervis_. ❋ J. T. Cunningham (1897)

(From Selenka.) a animal pole of the blastula, v vegetal pole, en mother-cell of the entoderm, ex ectodermic cells, s spermia, ib unnucleated yelk-balls ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

They are detached cell-buds; their separation from the large mother-cell takes place in the same way as in ordinary "indirect cell-division." ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

This is the mother-cell of the entoderm; it now begins to multiply by cleavage, and the daughter-cells (Figure 1.65 i) spread out from this spot over the inner surface of the blastula, though at first only over the vegetal hemisphere. ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

Rejuvenescence may be defined as the rearrangement of the whole of the protoplasm of a cell into a new cell, which becomes free from the mother-cell, and may or may not secrete a cell-wall around it. ❋ Various (N/A)

The first point of difference obviously is, that in the case of all the multicellular organisms the two or more "daughter-cells," which are produced by division of the "mother-cell," do not wander away from one another; but, as a rule, they continue to be held in more or less close apposition by means of other cells and binding membranes, -- with the result of giving rise to those various "tissues," which in turn go to constitute the material of "organs." ❋ George John Romanes (1871)

Husband: What caused [my wife's] [HIV] diagnosis? Doctor: Well...um...there was a megawhore mother cell in her [cervix] and, um, well, uh, you guys can't have sex anymore unless you want to get The Clap. ❋ Kopykopykopy (2011)

Cross Reference for Mother Cell

  • Mother Cell cross reference not found!

What does mother cell mean?

Best Free Book Reviews
Book Name Author
Friend Zone E-Book Camilla Isley
The Love Payoff E-Book Amelia Addler
Shootout E-Book Jami Davenport
Wild Mind E-Book David Barbur
Again, Alabama E-Book Susan Sands
Best IOS App Reviews