How To Use Reproduce In A Sentence

  • Fuss' photograms have reproduced water droplets, birds in flight, moving light and even a trail of snakes moving across light-sensitive paper, dusted with talcum powder.
  • The portrait, reputed to be the most widely reproduced photograph in the world, has come to symbolize not just the ideals of the Cuban revolution but of revolution in general.
  • Here's what the magazine reproduces from his award citation.
  • No surer sign of a female character's evilness is his disinterest or refusal to reproduce. Michael Giltz: Halloween DVDs: The Exorcist, Psycho, Troll 2 and More
  • When asked for permission to reproduce a work she granted the request and refused payment.
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  • Rebuilding the aglet that allows cells to divide helps those cancer cells reproduce and spread. You Staying Young
  • These used rotating discs to initiate a quasi-musical sound which was then filtered, processed and reproduced at different pitches.
  • If they fail to reproduce their kind, they have failed in their purpose; they are unconsciously ruled by the philoprogenitive passion; it is their raison d'etre, for it they are fed, clothed, trained, bred. Captivity
  • Apart from portraits, Kelly painted landscapes and also pictures of Asian dancing girls that were once much reproduced in the form of popular prints.
  • Experiments have demonstrated the ability to reproduce classical conditioning phenomena and robot control simulations.
  • That's right, vast swabs of the offending speech are reproduced under the cover of the Parliamentary privilege that had been so abused.
  • Chemists discovered that in the presence of light, rhodium compounds react with DNA, and they ultimately kill malignant cells by interfering with their ability to reproduce.
  • If you would like to reproduce, post, or archive any portion of this story, please contact me and obtain permission first.
  • The painting is reproduced here by courtesy of the Tate Gallery.
  • With his permission it is reproduced hereunder.
  • Assane Dione has painted a portrait of Amadou Bamba that has been reproduced and sold as a snapshot-sized print all over Senegal for several years now.
  • His work thus has the tendency to reproduce the elisions of the religious and political polemics of the sixteenth century while seeking to explain them.
  • The most powerful impulse of the time can be summed up as neoclassicism, a reversion to the purist attempts of the Renaissance to reproduce classical models.
  • Primarily they reproduce asexually, which they accomplish by binary fission, or simple cell division.
  • How many times does the word reproduce’ or reproducability’ appear in that definition? LIA and MWP in Venezuela « Climate Audit
  • For example, many tropical species reproduce at irregular supra-annual intervals.
  • As the science advances, stem cells could reproduce the disease in a test tube. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then they slot in behind their partner and try to reproduce it exactly. Fools Rush In - A Call to Christian Clowning
  • See, the worst part isn't even that our good ideas get blueprinted and reproduced.
  • Reproduced are paintings, which won the top prizes in a contest organised by a Malayalam daily.
  • Clams reproduce sexually and like most mollusks they are hermaphroditic, although some soft shelled clams are dioecious, meaning they have distinct genders. CreationWiki - Recent changes [en]
  • If she can reproduce that form she has to be involved. The Sun
  • But this terror of contravening an unascertained and unascertainable will, cannot coexist with reflection: it disappears with civilization, and can no more be reproduced than the fear of ghosts after childhood. Uncollected Prose
  • These exquisite works are now available in masterfully reproduced limited editions on canvas that capture all the detail and rich vibrancy of the originals.
  • Her stereo system reproduces every note perfectly.
  • They would break up and rearrange themselves as the yeast cells reproduced.
  • In fact, metrology is concerned with nothing less than finding a method of being able to control the constancy of the international prototype metre, the basis of the whole metric system, so accurately that not only will every change, however small, which could possibly occur in it be accurately measured, but also if the prototype were entirely lost, it could nevertheless be reproduced so exactly that no microscope could ever reveal any divergence from the original prototype. Nobel Prize in Physics 1907 - Presentation Speech
  • Lobsters can reproduce a lost limb.
  • In other words, it seemed that as petty commodity traders these marketwomen were often unable even to reproduce their present conditions.
  • Some of the dialogue is clunky and dated, perhaps, and some of the plots just plain don't work, but apart from some poorly reproduced art, these collections would be cheap at twice the price.
  • The prospect of yet more exploitative taxes to support reproducer indulgence means that a questioning of the bio-political privileging of natality is long overdue.
  • In addition to determining the available volume of the disc, discography is used to reproduce the symptoms associated with a possible herniated disc.
  • It is not easy to imagine a mechanical analogue of the brain that could faithfully reproduce the intertexture of all the types of thinking appropriate to all the situations that human beings confront, together with the nonlogical modes through which ideas are associated in the “stream of consciousness.” Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • When fish stocks are severely depleted, their output is also reduced - because there are fewer fish remaining to reproduce.
  • We all know it when we see it but teachers and politicians have found it confoundingly hard to reproduce. Times, Sunday Times
  • The trial lasted a whole hour, the intention being, I suppose, to reproduce that tediousness which is so characteristic of real trials. Castellinaria and Other Sicilian Diversions
  • A pine tree is called a sporophyte because it develops from a spore produces spores is haploid can reproduce sexually and asexually cannot undergo meiosis Yahoo! Answers: Latest Questions
  • Maybe they didn't reproduce, didn't know how to, just split in two like amoebae. THE TOUCH OF INNOCENTS
  • And in the end pretty well everything I wrote was reproduced verbatim.
  • Well, the Lord he'p the nigger!" exclaimed Miss Becky, in a tone that seemed to reproduce, by some curious agreement of sight with sound, her general aspect of peakedness. Southern Prose and Poetry for Schools
  • A study said mums' fat deposits shorten a newborn's lifespan by damaging structures that help cells reproduce. The Sun
  • A newer anti-HIV drug called pyridinone caused HIV to mutate into a form which could not reproduce or infect new cells.
  • In the second year the slow autotype process had to be abandoned for the quicker Woodburytype, by which were reproduced drawings kindly contributed by Sir J.E. Millais, Sir John Gilbert, Mr. Holman Hunt, Philip Gilbert Hamerton
  • Genetically engineered species reproduce themselves in the wild, changing ecosystems forever.
  • Replace them with stem cells that reproduce the lost tissue. Times, Sunday Times
  • I shall not try to reproduce the policemen's English.
  • I have a message to women: Only reproduce with men who are willing helpmates, and we will get rid of this problem in a few generations.
  • The turtles return to the coast to reproduce.
  • Clever seamstresses, milliners, and tradesmen quickly reproduced the latest in sleeves, bonnets, and furnishings for their wealthy clients.
  • Permission to reproduce must be requested from Lodinews. com if the reuse is for commercial purposes such as reselling the material, selling advertising on a site or print publication in which the material is reproduced or using material to promote the sale of a product or service. Undefined
  • It possesses a certain inimitable quality, the combination of unique elements that make it impossible to reproduce exactly. Boing Boing
  • Many of the cast-iron firedogs are reproduced from the original 16th to 18th Century patterns.
  • These bacteria reproduce
  • While the tintype served the mass-portraiture market, wet-plate lent itself to landscapes, cityscapes, and mass-reproduced celebrity portraits.
  • When individual animals seem unable to reproduce, keepers can call in physiologists to diagnose possible biological problems.
  • Woman, he declares, is the "crooked piece of man," and man has no greater misfortune than that he must commune with her to reproduce: it is "the foolishest act a wise man commits in all his life. Was It Something I Said?
  • Helping the colony reproduce is a greater evolutionary success. At What Level did this Evolve?
  • The coded form of instructions for the developmental process is, like the written word, subject to misprints when it is reproduced.
  • The small Greek figurines known as Tanagra statuettes were mass produced from moulds, and reproduce everyday life as well as copies of famous statues.
  • Remember, without a ‘host,’ a virus cannot reproduce and spread.
  • The nonprofit group was established in North Carolina in 2003. The aim is to fight hunger and help rurally rural economies with labor-saving agricultural devices that can be reproduced locally.
  • He is merely trying - not very convincingly - to reproduce the two-dimensional character created by the media.
  • Lisa, NOWHERE in ew Moon does it say that vampires reproduce. 'New Moon': A Hater's Guide | EW.com
  • A study said mums' fat deposits shorten a newborn's lifespan by damaging structures that help cells reproduce. The Sun
  • The banishing of heterogenesis from microbiology and the resultant recognition that micro-organisms, like all the more visible forms of life, are reproduced only by their own kind, made possible the establishment of bacteri - ology as a precise science and its revolutionary appli - cations in immunology and in the treatment of infec - tious diseases. SPONTANEOUS GENERATION
  • The negatives Freund had taped to her body in escaping Germany appeared in Le Livre brun in 1933 and were reproduced throughout the world. Gis��le Freund.
  • It is difficult to reproduce a signature exactly.
  • Furthermore it reproduces the form of disciplinary society itself; prisons are societies in microcosm. Foucault and Derrida - The Other Side Of Reason
  • The space inside a hot water bottle, when cast, simply produces a duplicate bottle; the space around a bath only reproduces its familiar concavity. Rachel Whiteread: Drawings
  • So, like an addict wanting to reproduce the effect of their first high, you are forced to go higher and steeper. Times, Sunday Times
  • In addition to original colors and exactly reproduced textiles, almost all of the furnishings, including furniture, silver, porcelains, and portraits, belonged to Andrew Jackson.
  • Critics, meanwhile, judge performances by the degree of textual fidelity to the "urtext" -- a score that tries to reproduce the composer's original intent. What Music Has Lost
  • Two of these cartoons, from the pages of the satirical London magazine Punch, are reproduced here.
  • The relatively few words the Clan spoke-which Jondalar could hardly reproduce, just as she was not quite able to pronounce certain sounds in Zelandonii or Mamutoi-were made with a peculiar kind of vocalization, and they were usually used for emphasis, or for names of people or things. The Plains of Passage
  • Nematomorphs are dioecious, they reproduce with true copulation or pseudocopulation (Gordiida).
  • The two volumes also reproduce (in a small format) all the original illustrations. The Times Literary Supplement
  • In the second case, disregarding mere syntactic and etymologic equivalence, his aim will be to reproduce the inner meaning and power of the original, so far as the constitutional difference of the two languages will permit him. The Unseen World, and Other Essays
  • They have had to adapt to high temperatures, shortage of water and a very brief time in which to reproduce.
  • At the end of the preface, Carpenter denies any attempt to have reproduced the text in a facsimile transcription.
  • A virus needs a suitable host cell in order to reproduce.
  • ‘Ironically,’ notes Miller, ‘the sort of feminist reading which stressed Charlotte's victimhood unintentionally reproduced the martyrology of the Victorians.’
  • As they trample on nationalities to reproduce London and Londoners in Europe and Asia, so they fear the hostility of ideas, of poetry, of religion, -- ghosts which they cannot lay; -- and, having attempted to domesticate and dress the Blessed Soul itself in English broadcloth and gaiters, they are tormented with fear that herein lurks a force that will sweep their system away. English Traits (1856)
  • His celebrated portrait of Charles William Lambton in scarlet velveteens was sometimes assumed to be an imaginary portrait of the dreaming, youthful Byron, the very soul of English romanticism, and was reproduced across Europe as such, and is still instantly recognisable today. Thomas Lawrence: The new romantic – review
  • Circus Bed Quilt was reproduced in the Ladies, Home Journal with instructions for reproducing the design as a cloth quilt.
  • In the wide scheme of things, these behavioral deficits could, in the long term, undermine the ability of a species such as the deer mouse to reproduce in the wild.
  • Kelman reproduces it, with the cut portions in bold type, emphasising only what a good job was made of editing it.
  • However, his argument works only if the cooperative groups also had practices — such as monogamy and the sharing of food with other group members — that reduced the ability of their selfish members to outreproduce their more generous members. The Selfless Gene
  • It has been argued recently that the mind is a complex of conflicting and complementary memetic patterns seeking to reproduce.
  • That has to do with transforming a death-dealing idea into a life-giving idea, in creating a new mneme from the Greek word for memory that will reproduce among our species in the same way a gene does and convince us to save us from ourselves by restoring the Earth to balance. The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed
  • Professionals use a device called a colorimeter to measure the actual computer display and create a profile that is then used to reproduce colors faithfully.
  • Again, some researchers are debating whether or not moss can actually reproduce by spores.
  • It is hard to bet against them regaining their place in the top flight if they reproduce this form. The Sun
  • It has a loosely federated structure in which similar activities to those undertaken in the UK are reproduced in other locations, and in which there may be considerable adaptation to local business conditions.
  • Professor Norton, of Harvard University, published a set of thirty-three of the best of the _Liber_ studies, reproduced in Boston by the heliotype process. A History of Art for Beginners and Students Painting, Sculpture, Architecture
  • In the majority of clonal plant species, which reproduce chiefly by vegetative propagation, seedling recruitment is infrequent.
  • Corals, like the majority of marine invertebrates can also reproduce sexually by releasing eggs and sperm.
  • It is illegal to reproduce these worksheets without permission from the publisher.
  • Sealing food in an airtight jar starves the bacteria of oxygen and they are unable to reproduce.
  • Writing grew out of an attempt to reproduce speech in a permanent form.
  • For example, some who fixate on the image of the crucifixion are known to reproduce the wounds of Christ so-called stigmata. Experiencing the Next World Now
  • This description is able to reproduce the observed biphasic behavior with randomly and uniformly distributed channels and vesicles.
  • A manufactured pill tried to reproduce the effect but it did not work as well as the smoke. Times, Sunday Times
  • I quote this short poem in full (the bracketed letters, which refer the reader to Scriptural verses listed in the margins, are reproduced from the original text).
  • Every feather and bit of down on the bird is sensitively reproduced.
  • It may be that the respondent will reproduce the transcript as part of the further material.
  • In principle, the steady drone of flat, slack sentences reproduces the demoralised world they depict, not the limits of the writer's talent.
  • Anyone wanting to reproduce one of my poems will almost always get a speedy and favourable response to an inquiry.
  • Whewell brought the point home by identifying competing theories of capillarity, due to Poisson and Laplace, that were equally able to reproduce the phenomena but which were based on incompatible atomic force laws, as Gardner (1979, 20) has pointed out. Atomism from the 17th to the 20th Century
  • The paper reproduces an abbreviated version of the speech with which he is currently touring Germany.
  • Feldberg and Gaddum17, though unable to reproduce effects obtained by Kibjakow with pure Locke's solution, found that, when eserine was added to the fluid perfusing the ganglion, stimulation of the preganglionic fibres regularly caused the appearance of acetycholine in the venous effluent. Sir Henry Dale - Nobel Lecture
  • The resistant hydrilla is a dioecious, female form that reproduces asexually.
  • In the same discourses, women are defined through domesticity where women are reduced to reproducers of race, nation or ethnic group.
  • There are combinations of plants seen elsewhere that enchanted you and that you try to reproduce. Times, Sunday Times
  • What actually happens is that the virus inserts itself into the host cell, and in the host cell it sends out the message to the host cell to reproduce the proteins which are essential for the virus.
  • Of the rich metal finds from Hissar III we reproduce p. 43 here only a drawing of a moufflon head, one of five, made of gold foil and intended to be sewn on to some sort of textile. Archive 2008-03-01
  • It just happens that mutations that construct organisms which reproduce more efficiently are conserved over time.
  • Duplicator: Small office - type printing machine that reproduces copy in small quantities and of a lower quality.
  • They are all cancer cells and all they can do is grow and reproduce. The Antioxidant Health Plan
  • In 1843 he set up the first printing workshop to reproduce photographs for sale.
  • I was pleased with the way the monitor reproduced color gradients - without undesired banding at any contrast/brightness settings.
  • Charmed with the soothing tones, he endeavoured to reproduce them himself, and after cutting seven of the reeds of unequal length, he joined them together, and succeeded in producing the pipe, which he called the syrinx, in memory of his lost love. Myths and Legends of Ancient Greece and Rome
  • This photo has been reproduced in numerous books about Hemingway. Hemingway in Paris - Parisian walks for the literary traveller
  • During the eighth century, Chinese civility was not only assimilated, it was reproduced in toto.
  • All illustrations are reproduced by kind permission of the Mercury Gallery.
  • Many of the exquisite carvings and secret chambers found in old wooden chests and wardrobes are difficult to reproduce.
  • This state of doubt in which I was plunged was not due, as I flattered myself for a time by supposing, to a sentiment which a man of fashion would not have felt and which, consequently, a writer, even if he belonged apart from his writership to the fashionable caste, ought to reproduce in order to be thoroughly ‘objective’ and to depict each class differently. The Guermantes Way
  • By contrast, many Old World monkeys, such as baboons and macaques, live longer, start to reproduce later, and have more time between babies.
  • The narrative of sexual deviance does not subvert conventional power relations, but rather reproduces them.
  • Mills may have paid a record price, but Goupil still owned the copyright, which enabled him to reproduce the composition again in 1877 as a photogravure.
  • Among these the portrait of Frans appears to have enjoyed a special status, as it was the only such work in the collection to be reproduced in a print.
  • The original reproduces clearly in a photocopy.
  • Through what I termed its "muscarine" action, it reproduced at the periphery all the effects of parasympathetic nerves, with a fidelity which, as I indicated, was comparable to that with which adrenaline had been shown, some ten years earlier, to reproduce those of true sympathetic nerves. Sir Henry Dale - Nobel Lecture
  • Manuscripts by Leonardo dispersed throughout Europe, and to reproduce the highly important original sketches they contain, by the process of "photogravure". The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci — Volume 1
  • The cod has a rather unexciting sex life; whether a male cod reproduces or not depends on whether there is a female cod close by.
  • They could reverse-engineer almost any organic substance and encode a gene to reproduce it. VITALS
  • Anthozoan polyps reproduce both sexually and asexually.
  • Experiments have demonstrated the ability to reproduce classical conditioning phenomena and robot control simulations.
  • Replace them with stem cells that reproduce the lost tissue. Times, Sunday Times
  • The new design unfortunately reproduced some of the problems of the earlier model.
  • The trademark sound of his instruments had been cheaply reproduced on digital synthesisers and he had lost control of his brand name.
  • This week we move a step further down the line and get a 3-D look at how the little critters reproduce. Times, Sunday Times
  • The other method mushroom polyps use to reproduce is division.
  • Among the most widely reproduced portraits in the history of photography, ‘Churchill’ was also one of the first to carry the famous "Karsh of Ottawa" copyright. Audio Interview with Curator Jerry Fielder: On Karsh and Photography Books
  • In the very process of producing things, the working class also reproduces the wealth of the capitalists.
  • Manfred Eicher launched and faithfully maintains his hyper-romantic label ECM - to have the sound of certain instruments and the relationship between them and space so meticulously reproduced you can actually sense yourself suspended inside time. Culture | guardian.co.uk
  • The negative shadow creates the images, which cannot be reproduced.
  • In this way Professor Bjerknes has been able to reproduce analogues of all the phenomena of magnetism and diamagnetism, those phenomena which may be classed as effects of induction being directly reproduced, while those which may be classed as effects of mechanical action, and resulting in change of place, are analogous inversely. Scientific American Supplement, No. 488, May 9, 1885
  • This scenario is reproduced dozens, hundreds, thousands of times a night in New Orleans.
  • On reaching the gut of the sand fly, the organism converts to a promastigote form, reproduces, and migrates to the buccal cavity.
  • In the wide scheme of things, these behavioral deficits could, in the long term, undermine the ability of a species such as the deer mouse to reproduce in the wild.
  • After looking at two-dimensional patterns made up of red and white squares and triangles, you have to reproduce these patterns using cubes with red and white faces.
  • [2728] Harvey remarks, "The Valentinian Saviour being an aggregation of all the aeonic perfections, the images of them were reproduced by the spiritual conception of Achamoth beholding the glory of Soter. ANF01. The Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus
  • The three images were then projected onto a screen by three separate lanterns to reproduce the full colour image.
  • The prayer was reproduced, with a context, in the program insert.
  • The spectroscope will detect less than one-millionth of the matter contained in the word pencilled above.] [Illustration: _Reproduced by permission of X-Rays Ltd. The Outline of Science, Vol. 1 (of 4) A Plain Story Simply Told
  • His narrative of addiction doubles as a meta-critique on the compulsive desire to reproduce text and image that characterizes postmodern textualities as well as the apparatuses that produce them.
  • Sharks are diverse reproducers, and their mating has been observed only on rare occasions.
  • I reproduce this guff in extenso and commend a quick read of the rest of it and then have a root round, provided always you are of phlegmatic mien. Archive 2008-03-30
  • And second, two experiments were conducted in an attempt to reproduce empirically the confederating function of humor hypothesised in groups facing such situations.
  • The refractive index was chosen to reproduce dextran concentrations because dextran is hygroscopic.
  • We reproduce what may be the most vicious tirade by a pollie against a journo, delivered by Danby under parliamentary privilege on Tuesday.
  • The full explanation by the artist of the new work was sent out to journalists and the Oxley Gallery mailing list in the form of a rambling and incoherent press release which we reproduced here in full last month.
  • The best tend to have fewer species, provide a great deal of space, and sometimes almost reproduce the animals' natural habitats - minus most of the dangers.
  • Well, then, secondly, Man pro-creates or reproduces his kind by the process of begetting, which is self-multiplication accomplished by transferring a portion of his substance to his offspring. The Kybalion A Study of The Hermetic Philosophy of Ancient Egypt and Greece
  • So we try to reproduce that. Times, Sunday Times
  • No one has been able to reproduce these effects in field conditions. Times, Sunday Times
  • The first imidazolinone was actually created later when Los was trying to reproduce a substance that had crystallized out of a solution of the original herbicidal agent prepared for testing on crops. Los, Marinus
  • Vaillant also reproduced his own pictures and some plates are original designs of his own invention: a portrait of his family and two nocturnal landscapes.
  • The goal is to find an organism that feeds and reproduces entirely or primarily on the target weed, significantly damaging it and reducing its ability to compete with other vegetation.
  • All rights are reserved - this article may not be reproduced in any form without the express permission of the authors.
  • PNAS introduced me to a brand new one: androgenesis, in which a species reproduces using only the DNA from sperm. Ars Technica
  • Most reproduce in cold, flowing water by creating excavations in the gravel called redds. Trout and Salmon of North America
  • Such incendiary observations may have alarmed some anglophone New Brunswickers, and the 1967 results essentially reproduced those of the previous two provincial elections.
  • It gives you the exclusive right to reproduce your work.
  • Rather like the poet's child, who though "Nature's playmate" yet "[m] ars" all its sounds "with his imitative lisp" (92-97) ,18 the speaker and his friends mar the bird's inimitable singing, and in fact seem to be drawn together night after night by what the nocturnal scene precisely does not provide them: by what their language of poetic archaisms, onomatopoeias, and other suspect figures of speech cannot reproduce 'Sweet Influences': Human/Animal Difference and Social Cohesion in Wordsworth and Coleridge, 1794-1806
  • Storni reproduces the externals, and gathers together the ingredients, but as yet does not have the alchemy to transform them.
  • Writing grew out of an attempt to reproduce speech in a permanent form.
  • On his return he painstakingly reproduced the Wyoming plains on the curved walls of the diorama.
  • He proceeds to draw each color-plate successively, at all times adhering closely to the red chalk outlines, filling in with tusche where full strength of the color is required and using lithographic crayon or the stipple process to reproduce the various gradations of this color in order to secure the full color value of each printing. The Building of a Book A Series of Practical Articles Written by Experts in the Various Departments of Book Making and Distributing
  • Midfielder needs to reproduce his early-season form. The Sun
  • It asserts that a woman's capacity to reproduce is to be subject not to her control, but to that of the state. Blogging for Choice: Every Child a Wanted Child
  • Limnoperna fortunei can attach to the inner walls of raw water pipe by thread-like byssus and reproduced rapidly, resulting in clogging of pipe and valves.
  • His team experimented with a type of asexual reproduction called apomixis, using the small mustard plant Arabidopsis thaliana -- normally a sexual reproducer EurekAlert! - Breaking News
  • Writing grew out of an attempt to reproduce speech in a permanent form.
  • A newer anti-HIV drug called pyridinone caused HIV to mutate into a form which could not reproduce or infect new cells.
  • The atmosphere of the novel is successfully reproduced in the movie.
  • reproduce the painting
  • The images reproduce contemporary photographs, while the likenesses of historical figures like Nitti, Capone and Ness are copied exactly.
  • They reproduce like rabbits and gnaw almost permanently because their teeth grow all the time.
  • The designs were reproduced from etchings by means of glyptography, a cheap form of graphic reproduction, enabling the publisher to sell the entire series of prints for one shilling.
  • I here reproduce a sample of kneepad commentary from the press and some of the same from the blogosphere. Sycophancy
  • In the case of the second investor, our model reproduces the tax-based investment strategy offered by numerous money managers.
  • [4] I am greatly indebted to Dr. Duchenne for permission to have these two photographs (figs. 1 and 2) reproduced by the heliotype process from his work in folio. The expression of the emotions in man and animals
  • Bacteriophages, or phages, infect bacteria in order to reproduce inside.
  • He was a world authority on the natural phenomenon known as apomixis, by which plants reproduce asexually. Day of the Dandelion

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