How to Use embryo in a Sentence
embryo
noun-
What did that mean about the whereabouts of their own embryo?
— Elizabeth Narins, Health.com, 7 Dec. 2021 -
The Cardinales’ case is not the first in which there was an embryo mix-up.
— Washington Post, 9 Nov. 2021 -
Is the person or the people who those embryos belong to charged?
— Lisa Deaderick, San Diego Union-Tribune, 3 Mar. 2024 -
The germ is its embryo, which has the potential to sprout into a new plant.
— Cynthia Sass, Mph, Rd, Health, 25 Mar. 2023 -
The next step on their journey is to find a surrogate to carry the embryo to term.
— Julie Moreau, NBC News, 1 Aug. 2022 -
The doctors were able to get seven — three less than their goal in the hope of getting one healthy embryo.
— Kevin Dolak, The Hollywood Reporter, 13 May 2024 -
An embryo like the one detailed in the paper, with all its bones in place, is rarer still.
— Aylin Woodward, WSJ, 21 Dec. 2021 -
Her ovaries are pulled outside her body, and a catheter full of embryos is plunged into her oviduct.
— Alexandra Horowitz, The New Yorker, 24 June 2024 -
Bizarrely, most of the embryo’s long stint in utero is spent barely doing anything at all.
— Katherine J. Wu, The Atlantic, 6 Mar. 2023 -
Some dropped their eggs in the shallow pits, and the embryos likely cooked from being too close to hot surface sand.
— Smithsonian Magazine, 10 July 2023 -
In February, the Troxlers had one last chance with a frozen embryo.
— Scott Gleeson, USA TODAY, 25 Nov. 2021 -
The embryos were nourished by a milk-like substance secreted in the oviduct.
— Riley Black, Smithsonian Magazine, 13 May 2024 -
The result is that over a million frozen eggs or embryos are stored in the United States today.
— Eva Epker, Forbes, 23 Sep. 2024 -
But as that egg becomes an embryo, the cells within it become more set in their ways.
— Ed Yong, The Atlantic, 8 Oct. 2021 -
The uterus transplant takes place and six months later, the embryo is implanted.
— Williesha Morris | Wmorris@al.com, al, 2 Aug. 2023 -
The embryos came from two other couples, both of whom sued for custody.
— Julia Whelan Krish Seenivasan Lance Neal, New York Times, 25 Nov. 2024 -
The medical name for the process the Ridgeways went through is embryo donation.
— Nadia Kounang, CNN, 21 Nov. 2022 -
Clear ice means the water had time to expand around the embryo before freezing.
— Oliver Whang, New York Times, 5 Sep. 2022 -
Scientists clone Ripley, along with the Xenomorph Queen embryo inside her, to study the aliens.
— Maddie Garfinkle, Peoplemag, 16 Aug. 2024 -
The embryos would have otherwise been wasted when the mothers died.
— Gareth J. Fraser, Discover Magazine, 14 Mar. 2024 -
The chimeric embryos were made by injecting the human stem cells into the pig embryos.
— Emily Mullin, WIRED, 8 Sep. 2023 -
Few Americans relish the thought of ending the life of an embryo or fetus.
— Emily Sweeney, BostonGlobe.com, 15 Aug. 2023 -
This resilience in the embryo has taken some by surprise.
— Laura Hercher, Scientific American, 1 June 2022 -
Inside each cone are dozens of seeds, and scientists search for healthy embryos.
— Lisa M. Krieger, The Mercury News, 9 Sep. 2024 -
The treatments produced two embryos, one of which resulted in their son, now 4.
— Yeganeh Torbati, Washington Post, 14 Apr. 2023 -
Even with perfect embryos… things don’t always go as planned.
— Angela Andaloro, Peoplemag, 29 June 2023 -
The answer, which holds much consequence in a post-Roe world, depends on the state where that embryo resides.
— Rachel Hatzipanagos, Washington Post, 29 Mar. 2024 -
In other words, by any moral metric, the embryo seems more deserving of life than the mother.
— Armstrong Williams, Baltimore Sun, 7 Aug. 2024 -
Flying to Denmark for her treatment, James retrieved three eggs, two fertilized, and one embryo was implanted—now her 4-month-old son.
— Yaakov Katz, Newsweek, 27 Nov. 2024 -
Some embryos that are created and transferred result in miscarriage, and not all eggs retrieved are fertilized.
— Emily Brooks, The Hill, 21 Nov. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'embryo.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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