Thus, there is no mechanism of ontogenetic developmental concrescence, just differentiation. |
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When the concrescence is complete, an actual occasion or actual entity's private life comes to an end. |
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The Will of the Absolute focuses into a point of concrescence to enter the Kingdom of Earth. |
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But I do feel that English, like Hebrew, is simply one manifestation or concrescence of that universal code. |
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During later stages of development, the entire ovary wall of typical flowers is formed by the concrescence of the walls of adjacent carpels. |
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Attempts to discriminate between phylogenetic patterns of concrescence or differentiation among serially homologous elements are therefore entirely futile. |
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Thus, large or complex teeth and scales arise through changes in the morphogenesis of individual primordia, rather than through the concrescence of primordia. |
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Clearly, it is extremely difficult to reconcile whether phylogenetic differentiation or concrescence is responsible for a decrease in the number of skeletal elements. |
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Phylogenetic patterns of concrescence and differentiation are similarly achieved through ontogenetic developmental differentiation, or a lack thereof. |
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True concrescence occurs when this union is during tooth development and may result from a lack of space or dislocation of tooth germs. |
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Acquired concrescence usually results from chronic inflammation that leads to hypercementosis. |
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McStay uses Whitehead's ideas of concrescence to talk about the creative process. |
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Had you been walking downtown on Broadway that February night at a little past eight, you might have seen a man hurrying toward you with a great concrescence of blooms. |
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Angiotensin Protocols represents a concrescence of two types of book into a single volume. |
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Based on such disparate taxonomic elements, its circumscription became very confusing, based as it was solely on the presence of petal appendages and basal petal concrescence. |
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