Progenitor in a sentence as a noun

I think Psyco was a separate code base, and not an actual progenitor of PyPy.

You can throw progenitor cells into a pre-built scaffold and they tend to organize like they should.

Well now, after so many years, the progenitor is ready to reveal the creation.

It will never be the hotbed of chaos and creation that the chans are, but it may well still be a progenitor of good content.

This is in bloody england, remember, the progenitor of everything we think about when we think "the west".Open your eyes.

We're in a unique situation here in that the progenitor of the format is alive and can appoint a successor to avoid that whole problem.

Is there evidence of what one or both of these two progenitor species were, and if so, can we identify the direction of gene flow and relative contributions?

I was interested in this company early on because the products were great - I was playing the progenitor to this game, "Draw My Thing", four years ago - so I agree that there's more than luck going on here.

If a progenitor could live a very long time and continue to produce offspring, it might be worse for the species, but it would be so much massively better for the individual's genes that those would be passed on.

The fact that these products look and behave almost nothing like their progenitor technologies doesn't indicate innovation to you?It really disturbs me how little respect us geeks have for the people who consume our products.

It's also historically significant: Dune II is to the real-time strategy genre what Wolfenstein 3D is to the first-person-shooter: not necessary the very first example ever, but the first to achieve notable popularity, and the progenitor of most of the following examples.

Progenitor definitions

noun

an ancestor in the direct line

See also: primogenitor