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symbiosis

[ UK /sˌɪmba‍ɪˈə‍ʊsɪs/ ]
[ US /ˌsɪmbaɪˈoʊsəs/ ]
NOUN
  1. the relation between two different species of organisms that are interdependent; each gains benefits from the other

How To Use symbiosis In A Sentence

  • A remarkable part of this exquisite symbiosis is the way the squid keeps the bacterial culture fresh within its light organ.
  • Unlike more advanced plants, fungi lack chlorophyll and so can only grow as saprophytes (from dead plants or animals); or as parasites (on living plants); or in a mycorrhizal relationship (symbiosis between fungi and the roots of trees).
  • The visual communication between members bordered on symbiosis as they smoothly switched up guitars, worked pedals, bashed away at keyboards and wailed through guitar solos.
  • Forging a symbiosis with the force that rules their world, some are viridescent, mimicking the foliage that surrounds them.
  • However, while there is considerable evidence for the translocation of photosynthetic products into the host corals, evidence regarding the benefits of the symbiosis for Crystalline deposits in Symbiodinium cells had long been misidentified as oxalic acid PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • It's a fateful symbiosis in a downward spiral of political aspiration.
  • It was this symbiosis between large herbivores and micro-organisms that sustained biological decay as well as adequate disturbance on a periodic basis.
  • What's new, and what allows the admission, is that MacNeill takes refuge in newer explanations, such as evo-devo and endo-symbiosis. Again, there is absolutely no teleology involved
  • In a neat yin-yang symbiosis, the two main floors embody entirely different but complementary functions and design principles.
  • There is a curious, arguably perverse, symbiosis in football between physical prowess and serious injury which remains unexamined.
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