English language

How to pronounce invagination in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms infolding, introversion, intussusception
Type of biological process, organic process
Derivation invaginate


the invagination of the blastula.
Type Words
Synonyms introversion
Type of condition
Derivation invaginate

Examples of invagination

invagination
The invagination closes to a vesicle, disconnects and moves back into the cell.
From the sciencedaily.com
In the invagination cohort, the fistula rate was 12%.
From the sciencedaily.com
The Golgi, ER, and lysosomes are likely to have evolved as a result of the plasma membrane going through invagination.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The invagination is pinched off, leaving the engulfed material in the membrane-enclosed vacuole and the cell membrane intact.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The plasma membrane creates a small deformation inward, called an invagination, in which the substance to be transported is captured.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The ejaculatory duct is derived from an invagination of the epidermal cells during development and, as a result, has a cuticular lining.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Life expectancy is slightly reduced compared to the general population due to the possibility of fatal bone fractures and complications related to OI Type I such as basilar invagination.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
  • The condition of being folded inward or sheathed
  • The folding in of an outer layer so as to form a pocket in the surface; "the invagination of the blastula"
  • Invagination to fold inward or to sheath. In biology, this can refer to a number of processes.
  • The process where an anatomical part invaginates upon itself or into another structure; One of the methods by which the various germinal layers of the ovum are differentiated
  • (invaginated) for scolex, being withdrawn within the body of the metacestode by turning outside-in, in a way which renders its apex the bottom of a cavity while the external walls of the scolex become the internal walls of the same cavity. ...
  • The process of forming a pocket by turning in on itself, as in the floral axis of figs (e.g. Ficus species where the minute flowers and fruits are actually inside theswollen inflorescence stem, the `fig'); the resulting multiple fruit is a syconium. Fig.18 Y.
  • The infolding of a sheet of cells, much like the indenting of a hollow rubber ball when poked.
  • Retraction, under force of pressure, of an outer surface toward the inside. (20)
  • A stage in embryonic development where a cell layer buckles inward