Embryo
Pronunciation
- UK IPA: /ˈɛmbɹiəʊ/
Alternative forms
- alpha forms ({{3}}) embrio Middle English to the 18th century, embryo 17th century to the present singular forms; embryones 17th century to the present, embrio's 17th–18th centuries, embrioes 17th century, embryos 19th century to the present plural forms
- beta forms ({{3}}) embrioun Middle English, embrion Middle English to the 18th century, embryon 17th–19th centuries singular forms; embrions 17th C., embryons 17th–19th centuries plural forms
- gamma forms ({{3}}) embryon 17th century to the present singular form; embryons 17th century to the present, embrya 18th century to the present plural forms
Origin
A Medieval Latin corruption of Ancient Greek ἔμβÏυον (embruon, "fetus"), from á¼Î½ (en-, "in-") + βÏÏω (bruÅ, "I grow, swell").
Full definition of embryo
Noun
- In the reproductive cycle, the stage after the fertilization of the egg that precedes the development into a fetus.
- An organism in the earlier stages of development before it emerges from the egg, or before metamorphosis.
- In viviparous animals, the young animal's earliest stages in the mother's body
- In humans, usually the cell growth up to the end of the seventh week in the mother's body
- (botany) A rudimentary plant contained in the seed.
- The beginning; the first stage of anything.
- Jonathan SwiftThe company little suspected what a noble work I had then in embryo.
- 1749, Henry Fielding, Tom Jones, Folio Society 1973, page 419:it dives into the heart of the observed, and there espies evil, as it were, in the first embryo ...