Use "genetic" in a sentence
genetic example sentences
genetic
1. It's wonderful to see your genetic contributions passed on to another generation
2. All the while Brazil marched doggedly ahead putting genetic formulas from the Kassikan into production for use on human beings
3. In return Talstan declared war on the mortals of Brazil and destroyed thousands of their genetic facilities with kinetic weapons launched from the moon
4. "None of us here can debate the niceties of genetic code," Haadij Doesshef said
5. One by one, in genetic sequence, the hands
6. Why was this not registering in her self confidence index? Because the lack of yaag cut that pathway off? Or was it a genetic defect
7. The languages of the time did not have words for extrasolar planets, digital simulation, genetic engineering, electronic surveillance and a lot of other terms that were needed to express the reality of current life
8. There were thick stands of dwarf thesh on their roof, genetic coding for it had been spliced into the hangleaf leaves the roof was grown from
9. The bulk of what we’ve sent has been genetic code and the bulk of what they’ve sent have been electronics lessons and code
10. She told him how before the energy age people had only lived a short while because of various genetic diseases which caused a general deterioration of the body
11. He wrote down Alan’s point about the genetic knowledge, even though he wasn’t convinced it was that significant
12. They knew about nucleotides in genetic programming
13. Even the Elders could not alter their own genetic codes, no matter how strong their ability to manipulate the Oneness
14. Since the early forties this whole complex has come on the market that establishes what I'll call a global genetic health immune system for the species as a whole
15. This can correct most defects in a person's genetic material providing they have a sufficient number of sex partners
16. There is in our genetic code instincts that we
17. As humans, we have a certain repertoire of natural, instinctive fears which have been passed down through generations of the genetic line
18. While the things that we think, feel, and attend to are not controlled entirely by biology, we are still creatures of instinct, and what rises to conscious awareness is often the result of genetic programming
19. to work on a genetic anomaly that was not
20. genetic change and he is about to bring the
21. Roidon didn’t recognise this b’tari, who was clad in some kind of dark-grey EVA suit, what’s more he had the original reptilian appearance that many have covered with a perception-altering technique or genetic resequencing
22. 5 billion years ago, and has subsequently taken many forms, all of which continue to evolve; and that the genetic code of all organisms living today, including humans, clearly indicates their common primordial origin
23. He looked down at his body; from what he could tell it was indeed his genetic body, for all its imperfections
24. the entire story of Frank, how he'd developed the basic programs, added a genetic algorithm to
25. He was certain that this was guy he saw enter matching the genetic profile on his scanner, which he had to ditch in snow, knowing it would never get past security
26. Inter racial and ethnic marriages in recent years, however, have gradually erased such distinctions or genetic dispositions and environmental influences, by blending hereditary characteristics and socio/cultural factors that may otherwise enhance or (diminish) performance
27. He may have been correct according to the latest genetic research for all I know
28. While on the subject of numbers, please explain how African Americans, who comprise approximately 12% of America‘s population, are over-whelming represented in most major sports? Do they possess genetic traits indigenous to their (own) race or is desire the key motivating factor? I will readily allow that sports have traditionally provided many under-privileged people, from all walks of life, a viable means of escaping poverty
29. DNA modification through genetic engineering is considered by many a virtual ―fountain of youth‖
30. It has the potential to treat diseases and other illnesses that could conceivably extend the average human life span to, perhaps, 120-130 years or more through genetic reengineering (or somatic modification) that would delay the aging process (or bio-degeneration)
31. Would any of us object if our physical and intellectual capacities at seventy (70) years of age were to one day equal or exceed that of a normal forty (40) year old today? Why shouldn‘t we believe that genetic research may one day extend human life to 150 years or more, for that matter? Who would ever have thought a few centuries ago that humankind would one day be sending satellites to probe the far corners of our solar system? The possibilities ensuing from this ―Brave New World‖ populated by ―demi-gods‖, if I may use the term, are (seemingly) endless
32. Did Parkinson’s have some kind of genetic component? The experts said no; ‘although there might be environmental factors
33. Something that might cause a big cat to avoid a water source, might just cause a full-blown genetic mutation in a bunch of salamander eggs
34. Is it something medical or genetic that goes wrong or is it some kind of evil spirit at work?”
35. “It’s incredible anyone would even try to do this, even with all the advances there have been in genetic engineering over the years
36. "There is a power that transcends our arrogant human genetic tinkering," Niklas shot back
37. When a man becomes a father, he gives of his genetic essence, a portion of all that he is, to the child, through the mother
38. Logic would strongly suggest that if God decided to appear in human form, that He would have allowed Himself to abide by the genetic rules that He had set up for all of mankind, even for all of life
39. Under those circumstances, the essence of God would have been divided with the genetic essence of a woman
40. This female genetic essence would have carried some unexpressed flavor of her father and to a lesser extent all the male line of her father’s family
41. If this logic holds, then it tells us that Jesus can be seen to be a diminutive portion of the essence of God, who must have, by genetic description, shared His essence with the inherited traits of Man
42. The physical body is basically made repeatable through the process of genetics, but from out of where did that first genetic endowment come? The mind as I’ve earlier indicated, seems to be, as we extend our grasp toward a better understanding, an intellectual construct and seems to reside within us in a manner that we still cannot clearly grasp
43. These are the genetic “gifts” that have been discovered up to the present
44. Will there be more? Will there be additional genetic “insights” that will lead to other areas of acceleration? Or is this all that there is? What about environmental dislocations that are suspected to have been a spur in past ages? (In an earlier chapter there was mention of a catastrophic environmental disturbance (flood) which seems to have taken place, 5,700+ years ago, approximately consistent with the ASPM “gift
45. Science itself implies that these genetic gifts so recently discovered had been bestowed long before we as a species had an awareness that they were there to use, or already in use in some small way
46. Science feels that it has discovered the genetic expression that encourages that behavior, called the Oxytocin gift as described earlier
47. 7 million years ago this genetic expression multiplied suddenly in an ancestor of modern man
48. Man seems to have little in the way of truly instinctive behavior, and in him there appears to be the greatest number and strongest version of the altered genetic expressions that science has discovered
49. Has this openness of the brain network fostered the learning, and its repetition over countless generations, of behaviors with survival value? Has this then been partially written back in by genetic expression, either original or altered?
50. Entitled families should be aware of their ancestry, genetic disposition, their strengths and weaknesses, specialisations, and overall familial mission