[ US /ˌbaɪəˈɫɑdʒɪkəɫ/ ]
[ UK /bˌa‍ɪəlˈɒd‍ʒɪkə‍l/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. pertaining to biology or to life and living things
  2. (of a parent or child) related by blood; genetically related
    biological child
    natural parent
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How To Use biological In A Sentence

  • In a field where biological material is limited, experimental cytogenetic techniques often require only a few cells.
  • So there is a perennial temptation to appeal to the idea of arbitrariness when discussing the alleged informational nature of some biological causation. Biological Information
  • Instead, they've argued, companies are more like biological organisms - living things that learn, evolve, and eventually die.
  • Beyond affecting the humans and wildlife that call the area home, the Arctic's warmer temperatures and decreases in permafrost, snow cover, glaciers and sea ice also have wide-ranging consequences for the physical and biological systems in other parts of the world. Arctic is warming, NOAA report says
  • To a large extent the life you have depends on who your parents were; it's just the luck of the biological draw.
  • Since 1975, landmines have killed over a million people, far outstripping the deaths caused by those well-publicized bugaboos, nuclear, chemical and biological weapons.
  • Why do you attack biological evolution when what you are against is atheism? Christianity Today
  • She decided to search for her biological mother after her adoptive parents died.
  • To study viral infections, Weitz teamed with postdoctoral fellow Yuriy Mileyko, graduate student Richard Joh and Eberhard Voit, who is a professor in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering, the David D. Flanagan Chair Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in Biological Systems and director of the new Integrative BioSystems Institute at Georgia Tech. Nearly all previous theoretical studies have claimed that switching between "lysis" and Innovations-report
  • Most notably, it acknowledged the lack of consensus on the "immutability" of sexual orientation - that is, on the question whether it has a biological basis or not - but noted that it was, at the very least, "highly resistant to change. FindLaw Writ - Recent Articles
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