Appendicitis appears to be simply the unavoidable downside of a particular vestigial structure. |
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Nevertheless, studying the extreme case of vestigial teeth clearly confirms that natural selection affects patterns of variability. |
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A tail is present and may be long or vestigial, but it is never fully prehensile as in many cebids. |
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It used to be maintained that there were almost 200 vestigial organs in the human body. |
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Now whether it's a vestigial remnant of a day past is something that I question very much. |
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By Monday night, though, in his 48-hour-warning speech, the references to international law and the United Nations had become vestigial. |
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Males produce only staminate flowers with stamens and no vestigial pistils. |
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This longing for joy is not a vestigial structure in a once functional lobe of our primordial brains that has become atrophied due to disuse. |
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Their unitards had panels of material attached to them, like vestigial or prototypal skirts, sleeves, aprons. |
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These are vestigial toenails, signs that rattlers are related to lizards and shed their feet somewhere along the evolutionary ladder. |
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In females, the Wolffian ducts and mesonephric tubules degenerate but are represented as vestigial structures. |
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The canines are absent or vestigial, and a substantial diastema separates incisors and cheek teeth. |
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Also, at best, vestigial organs could only prove devolution, not evolution. |
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The belief that wisdom teeth are vestigial organs that lack a function in the body, is less common today but still evident. |
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In order for a vestigial structure to be considered genuine the part in question must serve no contemporary useful purpose. |
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Scientists believe that vestigial structures are the remains of organs that were well-developed in ancestors of present-day organisms. |
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Once regarded as a vestigial structure, the role of the meniscus as crucial element of knee function and health has never been more evident. |
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What is totally lacking is any vestigial sense of wishing to appease the people responsible for these outrages. |
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This year he was crushed, frankly, by Patrick Campion, who is not only much larger, but is entirely unencumbered by any vestigial table manners. |
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Unlike most other snakes, boa constrictors possess small vestigial hind legs. |
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Dugongids lack the vestigial nails on their flippers that are possessed by manatees. |
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The thumb is small and has a vestigial claw, similar to the New World furipterids. |
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Masts and yards continued to be installed for decades, becoming increasingly vestigial, but the die was cast. |
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Although a vomeronasal nerve does appear in early embryos, by 36 weeks old there is no trace of it in the human foetus, only a vestigial structure on the nasal septum |
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Two days later, the Irish Army corp of engineers blew up the rest of the pillar after judging the vestigial structure to be too unsafe to restore. |
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Local TV news can be a vestigial thing, bulwarked by a bewildering assortment of weather forecasters reading from cue cards. |
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The greatly atrophied, scalelike, vestigial wings are inconspicuous and nonfunctioning. |
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Although his legal powers are vestigial, Thais still preserve an exaggerated respect for the monarchy. |
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The second and third toes are united and merely vestigial, a condition known as syndactyly. |
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In the chimpanzee, however one of the human species' closest relatives the plica semilunaris also appears to be vestigial. |
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In their view, Tyrannosaurus arms were vestigial organs, like the blind eyes of cave-dwelling fish. |
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It has already been shortened from 18 months in the 1960s to nine and now a vestigial six, half of which will be spent training. |
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Attachment to the parents' country of origin is vestigial and symbolic, and many of them have never been there. |
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But there are a thousand vestigial links with the past, and sometimes we can still taste the flavour of the things that endure. |
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Another species, Dorudon atrox, is also found with vestigial hind limb bones. |
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Our environment is not an inert structure, but rather a vestigial remnant of our ancestors' evolution. |
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The nominated property has already produced the exceptional first discovery of direct evidence of vestigial feet on a fossil whale. |
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I wish we could say the same about the Annual Report, which is becoming more and more vestigial, merely telling us what we know already. |
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Perhaps two vestigial remains will be here, but our job, honourable senators, is to do something in our time. |
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There are 557 buildings and vestigial remains, constructed at various periods between the seventeenth and twentieth centuries. |
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Old neighbourhoods and precincts, the social cells of the city, still maintaining some measure of the village pattern, become vestigial. |
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Awareness of these vestigial epithelial remnants is important in recognizing their associated pathologic conditions and in preventing misdiagnoses. |
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Although there's not a trace left on the outside, boas, pythons, and blind snakes all have completely useless vestigial hipbones buried in their bodies. |
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Scientists are coming to the realisation that we may all have the capacity for vestigial synaesthesia, even if our sensory pathways have been separated out as normal. |
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There is a vestigial non-functional perigynous disc and nectar is secreted by glandular trichomes distributed along the internal surface of the corolla. |
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The enteric nerve cells migrate following two pathways, one from each extremity of the neural crest, to implant along the whole of the vestigial gut. |
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Early growth and differentiation of breast tissue occurs in both sexes, but post-natal development is confined to females and the breast is a vestigial structure in the adult male. |
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Such myths, Manchester argues, may be vestigial in the modern era, but they remain vital to the cohesion of a culture. |
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There are vestigial remains of a Roman harbour on the western part of the island, and a number of wrecks of Roman vessels have been located in the waters nearby. |
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Because a foodie is a mouth with a vestigial person attached, one might think so. |
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In short, I tend to think the modern empire is fueled by greed and power and fear and other vestigial ape-politics, rather than some dark forces of ritualistic evil. |
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That is, except for a handful of more primitive serpents such as boas and pythons, whose vestigial femurs protrude from their scaly underbellies like stunted pincers. |
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Perhaps this attitude stemmed from some vestigial Old World notions of hierarchy, division of labor, or even the unseemliness of the music that they produced. |
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I think that Bob Carr is using you to score political points and any vestigial respect I felt for him has vanished in a puff of political posturing. |
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But perhaps the more canny readers can indeed read backwards from these general remarks and dimly perceive the vestigial outline of the example which occasioned them. |
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Is it vestigial imperialism on the part of sports journalists? |
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The point is not that vestigial organs have no function whatsoever. |
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Nipples in men are similarly vestigial, Dr. Lloyd pointed out. |
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Subsequent microscopic study of the outer layer shows that, in a few specimens, patches of the microcrystalline material grade laterally into vestigial spicular fabric. |
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Many evolutionists claim that the horse's splint bones in their legs are vestigial, that is, useless leftovers from its alleged evolutionary past. |
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In the other three families the maxillary palps are vestigial or obsolete. |
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Just as the members of a family of humans may have some defect such as a missing tooth, the members of a group of species may all share vestigial structures and genes. |
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Though they retain vestigial eye sockets, Miraluka wear decorative veils and generally have little trouble assimilating into human society. |
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Ensembles are of vestigial interest in this new pop culture. |
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They were considered individual vestigial artifacts, with little or no function in the contemporary culture. |
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These digits are retained in the living Equidae only as functionless, vestigial slivers of bone on either side of the third metacarpal and metatarsal. |
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This legislature, this parliament, which is a vestigial court in its own right by the way, is bound by doctrines of comity and mutual respect to co-ordinate institutions of government. |
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In addition, Yemen may have vestigial missile delivery capabilities and some minor stocks of mustard gas, and Sudan is increasingly cited as a possible producer of chemical weapons. |
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The buccal wall is near its base surrounded by a vestigial ectocingulid, which ends mesially in a tiny tuberculid. |
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But if vestigial feudalism exists in Japanese business life, it reflects the pure idea of the system, in which reciprocal commitments between the superior and subordinate are solemnly made and cheerfully fulfilled. |
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Etiquette is outmoded, she insists, a vestigial remnant of the class-conscious past. |
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Snøhetta will eliminate the vestigial curbs, and raise the entire pedestrian space to the level of the existing sidewalks, removing the subliminal danger signal. |
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In humans, a vestigial remnant of the nictitating membrane is the plica semilunaris on the inside corner of the eye. |
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True, these had familiar flaws: some Latin American countries still retain a vestigial weakness for fiscal deficits and overvalued exchange rates. |
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The hind legs existed, however, but were significantly reduced in size and with a vestigial pelvis connection. |
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During evolution, some structures may lose their original function and become vestigial structures. |
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But unless anything that emerges from his findings addresses the way things are now, let alone the way they'll be in five years, the prospects for lasting reform are vestigial, going on ludicrous. |
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It was a vestigial report that was used in older versions of the product to report usages with client licensing, and it was removed since StarTeam no longer supports client-side licenses. |
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Some species retain a pelvic girdle with a pair of vestigial claws on either side of the cloaca. |
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More advanced snakes have no remnants of limbs, but basal snakes such as pythons and boas do have traces of highly reduced, vestigial hind limbs. |
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The vestigial left lung is often small or sometimes even absent, as snakes' tubular bodies require all of their organs to be long and thin. |
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All that remains of them in modern horses is a set of small vestigial bones on the leg below the knee, known informally as splint bones. |
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Others, such as Herbert Evatt, believe or believed that reserve powers are vestigial and potentially open to abuse. |
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Examples of vestigial structures in humans include wisdom teeth, the coccyx, the vermiform appendix, and other behavioural vestiges such as goose bumps and primitive reflexes. |
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The other conjugation, called 'athematic', in which suffixes are added directly to roots, exists only in unproductive vestigial forms in Gothic, just like in Greek and Latin. |
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The hindlimbs of cetaceans are internal, and are thought to be vestigial. |
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Instead, the ATSC standard calls for 8VSB modulation, which has similar characteristics to the vestigial sideband modulation used for analog television. |
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In practice a technique called vestigial sideband is used to reduce the channel spacing, which would be nearly twice the video bandwidth if pure AM was used. |
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Some of the footprints are deep enough that they preserve the imprint of a vestigial toe, located in a position on the leg similar to that of a dog's dewclaw, says Kirkland. |
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