foetal in the PONS Dictionary

foetal Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Therefore, foetal wound healing can be used to provide an accessible mammalian model of an optimal healing response in adult human tissues.
en.wikipedia.org
It also excludes those resulting from birth traumas such as hypoxia or conditions such as foetal alcohol syndrome.
en.wikipedia.org
Some chronic and sub-chronic exposures can be harmful at much lower levels, especially at particular developmental stages including foetal, neonatal and pubescent stages.
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Primitive and foetal erythrocytes however, have markedly different characteristics.
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Ultrasound has become an important aid to diagnosing foetal progress during pregnancy.
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Six of the remaining seven were pregnant before suffering early foetal deaths although a "no-foal, no-fee arrangement" usually applies.
www.bbc.co.uk
Even if there is no foetal sickness, the diagnosis can be made in utero by foetal echocardiography.
en.wikipedia.org
Secondary ossification mostly occurs after birth (except for distal femur and proximal tibia which occurs during foetal development).
en.wikipedia.org
It is functionally imprinted in the human kidney, where only the paternal allele is expressed, but not in the foetal kidney.
en.wikipedia.org
Here, the mean expression increases by 400% compared to foetal and primitive erythrocytes, and covers a huge margin of deviation.
en.wikipedia.org

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