Used in a Sentence

eukaryote

Definition, parts of speech, synonyms, and sentence examples for eukaryote.

Editorial note

Moreover, there have been additional symbiosis events that have merged additional eukaryote branches and which have created the ancestors of other eukaryote phototrophs, e.g.

Examples17
Definitions1
Parts of speech1

Quick take

(cytology) Any of the single-celled or multicellular organisms of the taxonomic domain Eukaryota, whose cells contain at least one distinct nucleus.

Meaning at a glance

The clearest senses and uses of eukaryote gathered in one view.

noun

(cytology) Any of the single-celled or multicellular organisms of the taxonomic domain Eukaryota, whose cells contain at least one distinct nucleus.

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for eukaryote.

noun

(cytology) Any of the single-celled or multicellular organisms of the taxonomic domain Eukaryota, whose cells contain at least one distinct nucleus.

Example sentences

1

Moreover, there have been additional symbiosis events that have merged additional eukaryote branches and which have created the ancestors of other eukaryote phototrophs, e.g.

2

At some point, in a sequel to mitochondrial capture, a eukaryote engulfed a cyanobacterium capable of photosynthesis...

3

We are talking like two billion years here, more time than going from the first eukaryote to the first human.

4

That is why the title stresses that this is a new record for an eukaryote.

5

It is well known that the much less complex bacteria & archaea can live at much higher temperatures than any eukaryote.

6

All the cool things (multicellularity, eyes, flight) have evolved independently a bunch of times, and the eukaryote has happened only fucking once.

7

The mitochondria of this eukaryote are strange, because they (only partially?) lost one of these features to create one of the proteins.

8

Even if life is common in the universe, multicellular life is extremely rare because the evolution of eukaryote-esque organisms is extraordinarily rare and chance.

9

Bacteria and archaea (other than eukaryote ancestor) have never created multicellular life.

10

Fungi also became multicellular in parallel, but we’re not really sure what the original eukaryote was.

11

Cellular life is divided into 3 domains: archaea, bacteria, and eukaryote.

12

It's found by the hundreds to thousands in most eukaryote cells.

Quote examples

1

“It’s a thousandth of the way towards the complexity of a eukaryote,” says Lane.

2

It has been said that "Our true nationality is mankind", but I think it better to state "Our true nationality is Eukaryote".

3

So, the modification would be that we are living in symbiosis with mitochondrial bacteria, similar to how we live in symbiosis with our gut bacteria, rather than them being classified as "organelles" of eukaryote cells.

4

I was under the (perhaps wrong) impression that asexual reproduction predated sexual reproduction in the history of life (prokaryotes predating eukaryote?) so I always thought that organisms "lost" the trait of asexual reproduction somewhere down the line.

Proper noun examples

1

This is a decidedly Eukaryote-centric take.

Frequently asked questions

Short answers drawn from the clearest meanings and examples for this word.

How do you use eukaryote in a sentence?

Moreover, there have been additional symbiosis events that have merged additional eukaryote branches and which have created the ancestors of other eukaryote phototrophs, e.g.

What does eukaryote mean?

(cytology) Any of the single-celled or multicellular organisms of the taxonomic domain Eukaryota, whose cells contain at least one distinct nucleus.

What part of speech is eukaryote?

eukaryote is commonly used as noun.