Embryonic in a sentence as an adjective

You just haven't been able to get tax money to fund it, if the stem cells happened to be embryonic.

"Anti-stem cell research campaigns" are against use of embryonic stem cells.

I keep thinking I should start something though I'm sure there are hundreds of embryonic kernels out there already.

Rush Limbaugh at one point said embryonic stem-cell research in particular is useless, so he won't be bothered by this news.

Being wealthy, these embryonic ties, the cravates, would be made of expensive materials.

How was this determined without doing experimentation with embryonic stem cells?

So the "cancer subroutine" is really just a re-run of an embryonic developmental program.

While that is true, wouldn't embryonic stem cell fundamental research be capable of advancing adult stem cell technologies?

The code seems to be still in its embryonic stage, and most of the features are simply desiderata at this point; yet there is already a catchy name, a snazzy logo, a nice website, and even stickers!

He just wants to tinker and have fun, which is also why most of his game projects just stay at the embryonic stage; it seems to burden him greatly to follow up on the ideas, when the initial glee of tinkering with a new idea has worn off.

Most of you will probably recall those debates in the context of somatic cell nuclear transfer, embryonic stem cells, and therapeutic cloning, but the various appointed bodies pontificated on aging and longevity science as well.

" Sadly, the article never dives into more on this physics perspective and what kinds of forces and fields may be at play, instead turning to evolutionary biological arguments from embryonic development applied to cancer development.> Cells are usually regulated by mechanisms that instruct them when to multiply and when to die.

We envisage a collection of ancient conserved genes driving the cancer phenotype, in which the metastatic mobility of cancer cells and the invasion and colonization of other organs merely reflects the dynamically changing nature of embryonic cells and their ability to transform into different types of tissues.> The big picture is that we attribute cancer's survival traits to deep evolution on a billion-year scale, rather than orthodox explanations that point to evolution from scratch with each case of the disease.

Embryonic definitions

adjective

of an organism prior to birth or hatching; "in the embryonic stage"; "embryologic development"

See also: embryologic embryonal

adjective

in an early stage of development; "the embryonic government staffed by survivors of the massacre"; "an embryonic nation, not yet self-governing"

See also: embryotic