How to Use recombination in a Sentence

recombination

noun
  • The recombination process is the origin of what’s known as omicron XE.
    Joel Achenbach, Anchorage Daily News, 2 May 2022
  • This data gives clues to the recombination rate as well, DeLucia said.
    Emily Bamforth, cleveland, 8 May 2020
  • The number of chromosomes, whether the organism is diploid, the variations in the rate of recombination.
    Razib Khan, Discover Magazine, 26 Aug. 2011
  • When the body creates sperm or eggs, the cells engage in some reshuffling known as genetic recombination.
    National Geographic, 23 Mar. 2018
  • These new genes were likely acquired through a process called DNA recombination.
    William A. Haseltine, Forbes, 21 June 2022
  • As if mutation wasn’t enough of a problem, the virus has another trick up its sleeve: recombination.
    Joel Achenbach, Anchorage Daily News, 2 May 2022
  • Ultimately, the authors found that the queen showed levels of genetic recombination 100 times more than seen in the cloned offspring of the worker bees.
    Julia Musto, Fox News, 10 June 2021
  • That means the common method of viruses picking up new skills, called recombination, cannot operate here.
    Steven Quay and Richard Muller, WSJ, 6 June 2021
  • The longer from the time of admixture the smaller and smaller the blocks will become, as recombination slices apart long blocks and recombines ancestral components.
    Razib Khan, Discover Magazine, 10 June 2013
  • Viral recombination happens when two different parent strains of the virus enter the same cell.
    Erin Schumaker, ABC News, 3 Sep. 2021
  • In nature the process is called recombination—a virus exchanges chunks of itself with another closely related virus when both infect the same cell.
    Richard Muller and Steven Quay, WSJ, 5 Oct. 2021
  • With each generation the pairs of chromosomes—one from each parent—are snipped and pasted with one another; a process known as recombination.
    Jaco Greeff, Quartz, 6 June 2021
  • Normally, this recombination causes peaks in one half-beam’s waves to overlie troughs in the other’s, and vice versa, resulting in darkness.
    The Economist, 22 Aug. 2019
  • During egg and sperm formation, the corresponding chromosomes line up next to each other and swap some stretches of DNA in a process called recombination.
    Bridget Alex, Discover Magazine, 23 Feb. 2019
  • The recombination of genes that happens when our parents’ chromosomes pair up and the random mutations that inevitably result.
    Roni Dengler, Discover Magazine, 24 Jan. 2019
  • The recombination, coming a decade after the companies split up, was a controversial one.
    Christopher Palmeri, Bloomberg.com, 24 Jan. 2023
  • Because of recombination, siblings only share about 50 percent of the same DNA, on average, Dennis says.
    National Geographic, 23 Mar. 2018
  • This mishmash of subvariants is not unexpected, Rutherford said, and viruses go through such recombination all the time.
    al, 8 Apr. 2022
  • The colonists often threw each other over for neighbors in various spouse-swapping recombinations.
    Paula McLain, Town & Country, 2 Sep. 2015
  • The disappearance of free electrons during this era of the universe, known as the epoch of recombination, allowed particles of light — photons — to freely travel the cosmos, thus making the universe transparent.
    Robert Lea, Popular Mechanics, 14 July 2023
  • Their results show that the purifying effects of recombination on genomes never cease to be important.
    Quanta Magazine, 8 Nov. 2022
  • Kern argues that the differences in the rates of recombination across the genome reveal a phenomenon called genetic hitchhiking.
    Quanta Magazine, 8 Nov. 2018
  • Physics reports that the slow recombination rates are considered a promising and exciting outcome.
    Caroline Delbert, Popular Mechanics, 21 Feb. 2020
  • The team also discovered that mutations, usually thought to happen at random, are linked to these recombination sites.
    Roni Dengler, Discover Magazine, 24 Jan. 2019
  • Pieces of the chromosome flipped around, which eventually blocked the Y from pairing with its mate, the X. That in turn prevented a form of genetic housecleaning known as recombination, which helps rid chromosomes of mistakes.
    Quanta Magazine, 1 Dec. 2015
  • According to the study, co-infection raises the possibility of recombination of the genomes of the different strains, which can generate new variants of the coronavirus.
    Rodrigo Pedroso and Radina Gigova, CNN, 11 Mar. 2021
  • All of this recombination takes place between DNA molecules.
    John Timmer, Ars Technica, 1 June 2020
  • But Elissa Levin, a genetic counselor and the director of policy and clinical affairs of Helix, says a process called recombination means that each egg and each sperm carries a different mix of a parent's genes.
    Gisele Grayson, Washington Post, 29 Jan. 2018
  • Lack of originality is not a crime, though, and children’s literature is an art of recombination perhaps more than of invention.
    A. O. Scott, New York Times, 18 Jan. 2018
  • Tiny fluctuations in temperature and polarization of the CMB capture an all-important signal: the distance a sound wave travels from almost the beginning of the universe to the epoch of recombination.
    Anil Ananthaswamy, Scientific American, 18 Apr. 2022

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'recombination.' 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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