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enucleate
[ verb ih-noo-klee-eyt, ih-nyoo-; adjective ih-noo-klee-it, -eyt, ih-nyoo- ]
verb (used with object)
- Biology. to deprive of the nucleus.
- to remove (a kernel, tumor, eyeball, etc.) from its enveloping cover.
- Archaic. to bring out; disclose; explain.
adjective
- having no nucleus.
enucleate
verb
- biology to remove the nucleus from (a cell)
- surgery to remove (a tumour or other structure) from its capsule without rupturing it
- archaic.to explain or disclose
adjective
- (of cells) deprived of their nuclei
Derived Forms
- ±ðËŒ²Ô³Ü³¦±ô±ðˈ²¹³Ù¾±´Ç²Ô, noun
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ±ð·²Ô³Ü·³¦±ô±ð·²¹Â·³Ù¾±´Ç²Ô [ih-noo-klee-, ey, -sh, uh, n, -nyoo-] noun
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of enucleate1
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of enucleate1
Example Sentences
Both patriarchs realize and regret their folly, but only after ordeals that involve Lear enduring the least effective storm scene I have ever seen staged, and Gloucester getting enucleated.
You take that cell and fuse it to the enucleated egg, activate it — which starts it growing — and transfer it to a surrogate mother.
When he was 14, she struck him in the face with a toy metal sword, enucleating his right eye.
The third and most difficult stage in the procedure involves the insertion of the donor-cell nucleus into the enucleated egg.
Instead of enucleating them, they kept them intact and inserted the adult cell’s nucleus alongside the original one.
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