Heredity Sentence Examples

heredity
  • The general laws of heredity and variation have been proved to apply to man as well as to animals and plants.

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  • I guess so, but I wonder sometimes if heredity is the major factor.

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  • Heredity seems to play a role in who develops depressive disorders.

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  • Even within individual cats, there is a variation that depends on heredity.

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  • If you are choosing a dog from a rescue organization, information about the dog's lineage or heredity may be limited or nonexistent.

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  • Heredity plays a small part in whether a child has GERD.

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  • The nature of this sign is to push the family heredity into the future.

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  • Galton's primary interest in fingerprints was as an aid in determining heredity and racial background.

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  • To students of heredity this is precisely what would have been expected.

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  • The general laws of heredity and variation have been proved to apply to man as well as to animals and plants; and numerous facts in the distribution of races show that man must, in remote ages at least, have been capable of constitutional adaptation to climate.

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  • But his name is most closely associated with studies in anthropology and especially in heredity.

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  • Can anything work, or do I just have to deal with this heredity situation?

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  • Whether from heredity, stress, lack of sleep, or other issues, many women deal with the frustration of dark under eye circles.

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  • Heredity - You are more likely to become depressed if a family member has suffered from depression in the past.

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  • The average weight of a normal teen may fall in the range of 100 to 160 pounds depending on height, body frame size, heredity, age, and gender.

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  • Heredity plays a role in snoring, and children of parents who snore are more likely to snore themselves.

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  • Plaque typically builds up as people get older, more in some people than others depending on lifestyle (diet, exercise, alcohol consumption, and smoking) and heredity.

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  • Both the timing of dental development and tooth size are determined primarily by heredity.

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  • What is known is that the patient's environment and heredity play a significant part in the severity and course of TS.

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  • Researchers have found environment to be more important than heredity in influencing creativity, and a child's creativity can be either strongly encouraged or discouraged by early experiences at home and in school.

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  • Heredity plays an important role in childhood obesity.

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  • They are transformed as a result of a curse, by heredity, or even by having been bitten by another werewolf, a means of transmission almost unknown in werewolf lore.

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  • Heredity, race, gender, age, inactivity, diabetes, stress, alcohol consumption, and hormonal changes have all been found to affect heart and cell health as well.

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  • Age, heredity, and diet all play an important role in the development of gallstones.

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  • This weight gain may be associated with heredity or hormones - and it may be more noticeable after menopause.

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  • Other causes include physical trauma, alcoholism, and heredity.

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  • There are a variety of factors that cause chronic oily skin, including heredity, hormones, cosmetics, diet, and medications.

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  • In the case of the military classand prior to the Restoration of 1867 the term military class was synonymous with educated class this spirit of stoicism was built up by precept on a solid basis of heredity.

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  • Aries represents the future family and new heredity in children.

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  • The program was inspired by Noyes ' theology of Perfectionism, Plato's Republic, agricultural selective breeding and concerns about human heredity.

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  • Then twentieth-century biologists explained heredity and adaptation as a result of genes and mutations.

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  • Unfortunately fear is mostly influenced by heredity and the environment.

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  • The facts and theories respecting this are now discussed under such headings as Embryology; Heredity; Variation And Selection; under these headings must be sought information on the important recent modifications with regard to the theory of the relation between the development of the individual and the development of the race, the part played by the environment on the individual, and the modern developments of the old quarrel between evolution and epigenesis.

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  • Pasteur established (I) that the corpuscles are the special characteristic of the disease, and that these invariably manifest themselves, if not in earlier stages, then in the mature moths; (2) that the corpuscles are parasites, and not only the sign but the cause of the disease; and (3) that the disease manifests itself by heredity, by contagion with diseased worms, and by the eating of leaves on which corpuscles are spread.

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  • In heredity, complete albinism among animals is always recessive; and partial albinism (piebald) is always recessive to complete pigmentation (self-coloured).

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  • As of 2004 it is widely accepted that a child's intellectual ability is determined by a combination of heredity and environment.

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  • Genetic-Refers to genes, the basic units of biological heredity, which are contained on the chromosomes.

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  • Other circumstances that may make a child or adolescent more likely to engage in binge eating include heredity and certain psychological affective disorders such as major depression.

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  • While the amount and distribution of hair is determined by heredity, modern science can help men create their preferred image by either removing or adding hair where desired.

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  • Whether recent weight fluctuations or heredity issues contribute to facial plumpness, by following a few basic guidelines, you can learn to choose the best haircuts for fat faces.

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  • Hair loss happens for a variety of reasons, including hormone changes, vitamin deficiencies, heredity, illness, and as a result of taking certain medications.

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  • The development of such diversely-formed insects as the offspring of the unmodified females which show none of their peculiarities raises many points of difficulty for students in heredity.

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  • Yet in the second law he asserts that these new characters will resist the action of yet newer conditions or a reversion to the old conditions and be maintained by heredity.

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  • This reluctance was due largely to the increasing independence of this class of landholders, who were beginning to learn that the sovereign, and not their immediate lord, was the protector of their liberties; the independence in its turn arose from the growth of the principle of heredity.

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  • On the other hand, the complex structure of the nucleus with its separate units, the chromosomes, and possibly even smaller units represented by the chromatin granules, and the means taken through the complex phenomena of mitosis to ensure that an exact and equal division of the chromosomes shall take place, emphasizes the importance of the nucleus in heredity.

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  • In the articles Reproduction and Heredity the details of the relations between parent and offspring are discussed.

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  • And the important consequences following from the demonstration of the identity in structure of Limulus and Scorpio are evaded by arbitrary and even phantastic invocations of a mysterious transcendental force which brings about " convergence " irrespective of heredity and selection.

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  • The doctrine of heredity in disease thus took a larger aspect; the view of morbid series was no longer bounded even by the life of the individual; and the propagation of taints, and of morbid varieties of man, from generation to generation proved to be no mere repetition of fixed features but, even more frequently, to be modes of development or of dissolution betraying themselves often in widely dissimilar forms, in series often extending over many lives, the terms of which at first sight had seemed wholly disparate.

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  • The two main reasons are heredity and environment.

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  • While some causes of snoring are out of our control, such as heredity, age, and gender, other risk factors are preventable.

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  • Experts do not really know why phobias develop, although research suggests the tendency to develop phobias may be a complex interaction between heredity and environment.

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  • Heredity. Some individual are genetically more susceptible to acne.

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  • Although no gene for myopia has been isolated, heredity is believed to play a role in myopia.

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  • For some individuals, these skin conditions can be a matter of heredity, diet, or lifestyle.

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  • Obviously, this varies based on individual and heredity.

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  • But the conception of the equality of the king and his peers in the long run led to hereditary monarchy; for if the king held his kingdom as a fief, like other nobles, the laws of descent which applied to a fief applied to the kingdom, and those laws demanded heredity.

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  • The study of instinct is in the genetic treatment of evolutionary science a study in heredity.

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  • It is one of Darwin's great merits to have made use of these observations and to have formulated their results to a large extent as the laws of variation and heredity.

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  • Thus Bionomics is treated in such articles as Evolution, Heredity, Variation, Mendelism, Reproduction, Sex, &C.; Zoo-dynamics under Medicine, Surgery, Physiology, Anatomy, Embryology, and allied articles; Plasmology under Cytology, Protoplasm, &C.; and Philosophical Zoology under numerous headings, Evolution, Biology, &C. See also Zoological Distribution, Palaeontology, Ocranography, Microtomy, &C.

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  • Here Cuvier was imperfectly formulating, without recognizing the real physical basis of the phenomena, the results of the laws of heredity, which were subsequently investigated and brought to bear on the problems of animal structure by Darwin.

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  • In the branch of bionomics, however, concerned with the laws of variation and heredity (thremmatology), there has been considerable progress.

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  • To heredity, as an indirect or predisposing cause, has probably been assigned too great importance, and the many facts brought forward of the relative frequency of cancer in members of one family only justify the conclusion that the tissue-resistance of certain families is lowered.

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  • The Persian and heterodox party (the Shiites) insisted on heredity.

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  • Holiness is dangerous and may even involve degradation, as in the case of the Burmese para-gyoon or servitor of the pagoda who is by heredity for ever a slave and outcast, unclean of the unclean, with whom none may eat or intermarry, yet ever tending and keeping clean the shrine.

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  • The better we understand the laws of heredity and variation, and the more we learn of the history of the germ cells, the less need will there be to seek for explanations from telegony and other like doctrines.

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  • The unreflective moral consciousness never finds it difficult to distinguish between a man's power of willing and all the forces of circumstance, heredity and the like, which combine to form the temptations to which he may yield or bid defiance; and such facts as " remorse " and " penitence " are a continual testimony to man's sense of freedom.

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  • Unable to take Milan, Conrad issued in May 1037 an edictum de beneficiis, by which he decreed that the principle of heredity should apply in Italy to lands held by sub vassals,, and that this class of tenants should not be deprived e;f their lands except by the sentence of their peers, and should retain the right of appeal to the emperor.

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  • Philips son was the first of the Capets who was not crowned during his fathers lifetime; a fact clearly showing that the principle of heredity had now been established beyond discussion.

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  • Whatever value is to be attached to Mendel's observation of the breaking up of self-fertilized hybrids of cultivated varieties into the two original parent forms according to the formula " 'PP, 2PN, INN," it cannot be considered as more than a contribution to the extensive investigation of heredity which still remains to be carried out.

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  • If a character of much longer standing (certain properties of height, length, breadth, colour, &c.) had not become fixed and congenital after many thousands of successive generations of individuals had developed it in response to environment, but gave place to a new character when new moulding conditions operated on an individual (Lamarck's first law), why should we suppose that the new character is likely to become fixed and transmitted by mere heredity after a much shorter time of existence in response to environmental stimulus ?

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  • All these principles are consistent with Francis Galton's law of particulate inheritance in heredity, and with the modern doctrine of " unity of characters " held by students of Mendelian phenomena.

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  • If he is to be believed, at the bottom of all organic evolution organic impulses becoming habits produce structural changes, which are transmitted by heredity; and as an impulse thus gradually becomes secondarily automatic, the will passes to higher activities, which in their turn become secondarily automatic, and so on.

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  • A similar kind of segregation may take place in the formation of the repeated parts of an organism, so that symmetrical repetition may be compared with normal heredity, and be due to the presence of similar factors in the divisions of the embryonic cells, whilst the differentiation of repeated parts may be due to the unequal distribution of such factors and be comparable with variation.

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  • The new constitution proclaimed the heredity of the Bohemian crown in the house of Habsburg.

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  • In more recent times the controversy has been concerned either with the attempted proof of determinism by the advocates of psychological Hedonism, an attempt which at the present time is generally admitted to have failed; or with the new biological knowledge concerning the influence of heredity and environment in its bearing upon the development of character and the possibility of freedom.

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  • At present, however, the theory of heredity is usually held in conjunction with Darwin's theory of natural selection; according to which different kinds of living things in the course of a series of generations come gradually to be endowed with organs, faculties and habits tending to the preservation of the individual or species under the conditions of life in which it is placed.

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  • Firmness and breast shape is determined mostly by heredity.

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  • By it a new heredity, free from the limitations of protoplasmic continuity, is established.

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  • The horror aroused by this crime did not long deaden the feeling, at least in official circles, that something must be done to introduce the principle of heredity, as the surest means of counteracting the aims of conspirators.

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  • Now we know, from the numerous experiments in heredity which have resulted since the rediscovery of Mendel's principles, that an individual may carry a character in one of two conditions.

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  • This argument has been met in recent times by the application to mind of the physiological theory of heredity, according to which changes produced in the mind (brain) of a parent, by association of ideas or otherwise, tend to be inherited by his offspring; so that the development of the moral sense or any other faculty or susceptibility of existing man may be hypothetically carried back into the prehistoric life of the human race, without any change in the manner of derivation supposed.

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  • The weakness of the NeoLamarckian view lies in its interpretation of heredity; its strength lies in its zealous study of the living world and the detection therein of proximate empirical laws, a strength shared by very many bionomical investigations, the authors of which would prefer to call themselves Darwinians, or to leave themselves without sectarian designation.

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  • We do not yet know whether such absolute blending is possible or not, or whether all apparent blending is only a more or less minutely subdivided " mosaic " of non-combinable characters of the parents, in fact whether the combinations due to heredity in reproduction are ever analogous to chemical compounds or are always comparable to particulate mixtures.

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  • But practical necessity has given rise to the existence of many other divisions; see CYTOLOGY, for the structure of cells; EMBRYOLOGY, for the development of individual organisms; HEREDITY and REPRODUCTION, for the relations between parents and offspring.

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  • The operation of Mendelian processes in human heredity is further shown by the close relationship that exists between the appearance of albinoes and cousin marriages.

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  • Albinism appears, in the processes of heredity, to be sometimes indissolubly correlated with certain peculiar traits.

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  • C. C. Hurst has shown that the long-haired and albino characters are always accompanied in heredity with the swaying habit.

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  • Saunders, "Experimental Studies in the Physiology of Heredity," Reports to the Evolution Committee of the Royal Society, Report I..

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  • It can hardly be said that the science has advanced beyond the stage of disseminating a knowledge of the laws of heredity, so far as they are surely known, and endeavouring to promote their further study.

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  • They are subjects for a scientific psychology employing the historical method with the conceptions of heredity and development, and calling to its aid, as such a psychology will do, the investigations of all the sociological sciences.

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  • It depends on heredity, what you feed them, time of the year and a lot of other factors.

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  • George Sand, who was a firm believer in the doctrine of heredity, devotes a whole volume of her autobiography (Histoire de ma vie, 1857 seq.) to the elaboration of this strange pedigree.

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  • Instinctive behaviour thus depends solely on how the nervous system has been built through heredity; while intelligent behaviour depends also on those characters of the nervous system which have been acquired under the modifying influence of individual relation to the environment.

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  • These are discussed under the headings Heredity; Mendelism; and Variation And Selection.

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  • The history of this family, the Rougon-Macquart, was to be told in a series of novels containing a scientific study of heredity - science was always Zola's ignis fatuus - and a picture of French life and society.

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  • It will be seen that from the biological standpoint there fall under the stricter definition those hereditary modes of behaviour which are analogous to hereditary forms of structure; and that a sharp line of distinction is drawn between the behaviour which is thus rendered definite through heredity, and the behaviour the distinguishing characteristics of which are acquired in the course of individual life.

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  • The general relation between parent and filial organisms is discussed under Heredity and Embryology; many of the details of the cellular processes are dealt with under Cytology, and the modes of reproduction exhibited by different kinds of animals and plants are treated of in the various articles describing individual groups.

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  • But even were the laws of heredity and variation better understood, the fact remains that we know little of the origin of the majority of our domestic animals.

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  • If the earlier characters were not maintained by heredity why should the later be ?

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