English language

How to pronounce undifferentiated in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms uniform

Examples of undifferentiated

undifferentiated
An undifferentiated thought stream of the masses at some point becomes unwieldy.
From the techcrunch.com
But this too often meant they gave him beautiful, loud, undifferentiated sound.
From the suntimes.com
Mountain soil undifferentiated is forested with bamboos found in the sea coast.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The newly formed cells, stem cells, are undifferentiated but rapidly dividing.
From the sciencedaily.com
My cousin is in SE Asia, it made sense that he had undifferentiated carcinoma.
From the scienceblogs.com
Many of the problems of undifferentiated heavy lifting are being commoditized.
From the forbes.com
The team injected undifferentiated human ESCs into rats with injured spinal cords.
From the newscientist.com
Likewise, any useful amount of data would be an uncountable, undifferentiated mass.
From the economist.com
Instead, the entire undifferentiated subject is referred to as classical mechanics.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
  • Not differentiated
  • Describes tissues where the individual cells have not yet developed mature or distinguishing features, or describes embryonic organisms where the organs cannot be identified; describes a plant body where the vascular tissue has not developed, as in the thallophytes
  • A term used to describe cells or tissues that do not have specialized ("mature") structures or functions. Undifferentiated cancer cells often grow and spread quickly.
  • A cell that has not yet developed into a specialized cell type.
  • Of a cell, not changed in any way from its original form.
  • Cells that lack a specialized structure and function.
  • An immature, embryonic, or primitive cell. It has a nonspecific appearance with multiple nonspecific activities and functions poorly.
  • A stem cell that has not become a specific mature cell type. The stem cell holds the potential to differentiate, to become different cell types.
  • Alteration in cell character to a more embryonic type or toward a malignant state.