genealogic


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Adj.1.genealogic - of or relating to genealogy; "genealogical records"
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Raimondi comes up with a new kind of visual symbol, too, that marks a different side of intertextuality, showing its 'historical' connotation: a 'genealogic' map, animated with one's own personal memory, which is selective towards its sources from the very beginning, when it starts to choose among them, reading them--and thus interpreting and transforming them from the very beginning, too:
Further genealogic evaluation was realized by performing a karyotype on the maternal grandmother who was found to have the translocation (46, XX, t (11;22) (q23;q11.2) [16]) as well.
Eight genealogic trees of families with Huntington's chorea in Canete (Peru).
"Noves aportacions a l'arbre genealogic de la familia Monteada, senyors de la baronia d'Aitona." Acta Historica et Archaeologica Mediaevalia 26 (2005): 32.7-43
We used the concatenated sequence alignment in a Bayesian coalescent analysis with BEAST version 1.8.2 to infer node ages in the genealogic tree (21).
As Weinbaum demonstrates, Freud's incorporation of Yiddish-inflected German and genealogic metaphor implicated Jewishness, and might have been used to further demonize Jewish males in a nineteenth-century European context.
(10) The proper clinical and genealogic analysis is important for the determination of the genetic risk and prognosis for their relatives of the proband.
He defines here the approach as being analytical and (in the second chapter) he lays stress on the crucial importance of genealogic or "family lines" --i.e.
In the longest of the introduction's seven sections, "Bibliander's Linguistic Theology," the editors whittle the work down to its core elements: De ratione uses a "system of genealogic branching with Hebrew as its starting point" (XXII), and this "quest for a common 'principle'--in the sense of shared rules or a common structure for all languages--led consequently to the question of the hidden unity of all religions in shared basic convictions" (XXIV).

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