What is the name meaning of PHYLO. Phrases containing PHYLO
See name meanings and uses of PHYLO!PHYLO
PHYLO
PHYLO
Girl/Female
Indian, Tamil
Fairnice; Fair; Amsana; Dear'
Girl/Female
Tamil
Earth, Goddess Saraswati, Maiden
Boy/Male
American, British, English
Lives in the Forest
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
Shiv; God of Om
Boy/Male
Sikh
Heroic protector, Protector of the brave
Boy/Male
Indian
Without grief, Honourable, Noble
Boy/Male
Indian
Facilitation
Boy/Male
Muslim
Lamb
Girl/Female
Indian
Different; Ultimate
Boy/Male
Australian, Dutch, French, German, Latin, Netherlands, Swedish
Man from the Harida; Dark One; From Hadria
PHYLO
PHYLO
PHYLO
PHYLO
PHYLO
n.
The tribal history of the functions, or the history of the paleontological development of vital activities, -- being a branch of phylogeny. See Morphophyly.
n.
The phylogeny of groups or families of individuals.
a.
Relating to phylogenesis, or the race history of a type of organism.
n.
The tribal history of forms; that part of phylogeny which treats of the tribal history of forms, in distinction from the tribal history of functions.
n.
The science of real as distinguished from phenomenal being; ontology; also, the science of being, with reference to its abstract and universal conditions, as distinguished from the science of determined or concrete being; the science of the conceptions and relations which are necessarily implied as true of every kind of being; phylosophy in general; first principles, or the science of first principles.
n.
Alt. of Phylogeny
n.
The history of the individual development of an organism; the history of the evolution of the germ; the development of an individual organism, -- in distinction from phylogeny, or evolution of the tribe. Called also henogenesis, henogeny.
n.
A tribe.
n.
The history of genealogical development; the race history of an animal or vegetable type; the historic exolution of the phylon or tribe, in distinction from ontogeny, or the development of the individual organism, and from biogenesis, or life development generally.
n.
That form of homology due to common ancestry (phylogenetic homology), in opposition to homomorphy, to which genealogic basis is wanting.
n.
An oversounding, or a misuse, of the letter r; specifically (Phylol.), the tendency, exhibited in the Indo-European languages, to change s to r, as wese to were.
n.
In phylogeny, the evolution of distinct sexes in species previously hermaphrodite or sexless.
pl.
of Phylon