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bivalent

ADJECTIVE
  1. having a valence of two or having two valences
  2. used of homologous chromosomes associated in pairs in synapsis

How To Use bivalent In A Sentence

  • At the moment, the public has a rather ambivalent attitude toward science.
  • Mares which are in the ambivalent early stages of estrus or which are mistakenly in diestrus pose a clear safety threat in close quarters. TheHorse.com News
  • It was as impossible to be ambivalent about Diana as it is to be equivocal about going to war.
  • The fourth chromosomes often disjoin slightly before the other bivalents.
  • There is an ambivalent feeling towards rural workers.
  • Nations. yep, it's pretty quaint stuff, couched in terms of newness and normalcy, of foreigness and familiarity. it describes the music as modern and "swingy" and yet timeless, as being of universal appeal - they belong to everyone - and yet "from a single nationality." i wonder whether the universalist rhetoric was meant to appeal to non-jews or simply to jews ambivalent about their jewishness? or am i simply being naive about midcentury, metropolitan jewishness? it is interesting to me also that, apparently, zionist discourse had not yet divorced the term palestinian from any association with jewish heritage. Wayneandwax.com
  • Mr. Husain articulates a clear, unambivalent and positive assessment of the likely effects of globalization and liberalization on poverty.
  • Since individual univalents or bivalents in some nuclei may lie too close to each other to be resolved unambiguously, this method underestimates the frequency of achiasmate chromosomes.
  • An additional line drawing to the side depicts the spatial arrangement of the bivalent corresponding to LG - 02 and the FISH signals associated therewith.
  • He also said Mr O'Brien was ambivalent on the role of the banks connected with the consortium.
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