sapiens

[ US /ˈseɪpiənz/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of or relating to or characteristic of Homo sapiens
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How To Use sapiens In A Sentence

  • Cum liberum quendam uirum suppliciis se tyrannus adacturum putaret, ut aduersum se factae coniurationis conscios proderet, linguam ille momordit atque abscidit et in os tyranni saeuientis abiecit; ita cruciatus, quos putabat tyrannus materiam crudelitatis, uir sapiens fecit esse uirtutis. The Theological Tractates and The Consolation of Philosophy
  • Thus, the argument of Vestigian et al. 2006 that the universal genetic code did not originate in a frozen accident (in an actual cell), but arose communally, entails that n instances of the universal code (say, in H. sapiens, E. coli, and any archaean) do not indicate common ancestry from an actual cell — contra Dawkins, and most biology textbooks. A Disclaimer for Behe?
  • I've never read Watts, but his deep-adapted humanoids has me rethinking my Homo sapiens natator story. Eye Candy
  • Like Homo sapiens, animals take important cues from smell and know to stay away from flowers like the dreaded Douglas water hemlock, whose broad white blossoms contain coniine, which is deadly.
  • Issue regarding the Homo sapiens speciation and evolution has been intensively and extensively focused on.
  • Homo sapiens is Latin for “the wise human” or “the clever human. Homo sapiens
  • In the fossil record, Neanderthals don't grade smoothly into Homo sapiens.
  • Human, Homo sapiens, is a diploid (2n = 46) animal with a haploid genome size of about 3.5 pg. Comparing Teleological Predictions with their Non-teleological Counterparts
  • At another point, you are asked to reduce big words to little maxims: "Aberration is the hallmark of homo sapiens while longanimous placability and condonation are the indicia of a supramundane omniscience" turns into ... but there! VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol III No 4
  • The selves jostle for prominence in these pages: the mono-browed Neanderthal shoulders aside axe-wielding Homo sapiens; the neurasthenic intellectual trips up the bedaubed aborigine. Excerpt: Any Human Heart by William Boyd
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