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"juvenility" Definitions
  1. the quality or state of being juvenile : YOUTHFULNESS
  2. immaturity of thought or conduct
  3. an instance of being juvenile

22 Sentences With "juvenility"

How to use juvenility in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "juvenility" and check conjugation/comparative form for "juvenility". Mastering all the usages of "juvenility" from sentence examples published by news publications.

But the thing about a movie like Sausage Party is that it's up front about its goofy juvenility.
I also smile, realizing that while her innocence and juvenility might obscure her understanding of this moment, the girl will always have this image that symbolizes so much more.
"Children and young people are most vulnerable to the health impacts of air pollution owing to the juvenility of the brain and respiratory system," said Kelly, a professor of environmental health at King's College London.
Perhaps I was not attracted to "men" at all, really; I seemed to like boys my age, with long hair, who carried forth some inexpungible sense of juvenility and delinquency, and girls who skewed lesbian and wore tight clothing.
There are three primary causes of this variation: positional effects, environmental effects, and juvenility.
There are three primary causes of this variation: positional effects, environmental effects, and juvenility.
Festination by many of my stirp to spousal colligation with such asinegos, has crebrously obnubilated the most lucent prospicience of aleger juvenility.
Festination by many of my stirp to spousal colligation with such asinegos, has crebrously obnubilated the most lucent prospicience of aleger juvenility.
Festination by many of my stirp to spousal colligation with such asinegos, has crebrously obnubilated the most lucent prospicience of aleger juvenility.
Festination by many of my stirp to spousal colligation with such asinegos, has crebrously obnubilated the most lucent prospicience of aleger juvenility.
Juvenility in a seedling of European beech. There is a marked difference in shape between the first dark green "seed leaves" and the lighter second pair of leaves. The organs and tissues produced by a young plant, such as a seedling, are often different from those that are produced by the same plant when it is older. This phenomenon is known as juvenility or heteroblasty.
Moreover, the book is entirely charming quite apart from > its qualities as child literature. This is rare; for, generally speaking, > nothing makes drearier reading than the conscious juvenility of adults." Muggeridge continued by saying, > "Mr. Ransome has the same magical power that Lewis Carroll had of being the > child in terms of himself.
There are three primary causes of this variation: positional effects, environmental effects, and juvenility. Variation in leaves from the giant ragweed illustrating positional effects. The lobed leaves come from the base of the plant, while the unlobed leaves come from the top of the plant. There is variation among the parts of a mature plant resulting from the relative position where the organ is produced.
Noticing that a dog's skull looks like that of a juvenile wolf, British primatologist Richard Wrangham goes on to say that "this leads to the thought that species can self-domesticate." However, the evolutionary biologist Abbey Drake has found that "dogs are not paedomorphic wolves." Other characteristics that are associated with juvenility such as barking and meowing (sounds used by wolf cubs and kittens of large felines, respectively, to communicate with their parents), increased playfulness and reduced aggression, may also be seen in tame animals.
In addition to winning multiple Obie awards for his Off-Broadway work, Bernhardt has had a successful career as a Broadway theatre director. His first Broadway production came in 1969 when he directed Home Fires and Cop-Out, a pair of one-act plays written by John Guare. The production, which was staged at the Cort Theatre, was harshly criticized and closed after just eight performances. Although the individual performances of the actors were well received, the plays themselves were seen as "enigmatic drama", "weak social satire", and "feeble exercises in juvenility".
" In the Sept-Oct 1985 edition of Space Gamer (Issue No. 76), Allen Varney reviewed the first edition, commenting that "at least the game survives its editing, and it turns out to be an innovating, thoughtful, respectable superhero RPG. Occasionally it's simplistic, but always by design. It is not realistic, but it closely simulated the unreality of the comics. This is a good game for superhero fans who are put off by the intricacy of Champions, the clumsiness of Villains and Vigilantes, and the juvenility of Marvel Super Heroes.
The smaller and more succulent the plant, the greater the susceptibility to damage or death from temperatures that are too high or too low. Temperature affects the rate of biochemical and physiological processes, rates generally (within limits) increasing with temperature. Juvenility or heteroblasty is when the organs and tissues produced by a young plant, such as a seedling, are often different from those that are produced by the same plant when it is older. For example, young trees will produce longer, leaner branches that grow upwards more than the branches they will produce as a fully grown tree.
A. sediba was initially described as being a potential human ancestor, and perhaps the progenitor of Homo, but this is contested and it could also represent a late-surviving population or sister species of A. africanus which had earlier inhabited the area. MH1 has a brain volume of about 420–440 cc, similar to other australopithecines. The face of MH1 is strikingly similar to Homo instead of other australopithecines, with a less pronounced brow ridge, cheek bones, and prognathism (the amount the face juts out), and there is evidence of a slight chin. However, such characteristics could be due to juvenility and lost with maturity.
A morphometric study performed by Jason Downs and co-authors highlights certain characteristics that indicate juvenility in Bothriolepis, including a moderately large head and moderately large orbital fenestra—both of which are characteristics also recognized by Erik Stensio in 1948 in the smallest B. canadensis individuals. Several other features that Stensio marked indicative of young individuals can also be seen exhibited in the Catskill sample. These features include "delicate dermal bones with ornament consisting of continuous anastomosing ridges rather than tubercles, a dorsal trunk shield narrower than long and with a continuous and pronounced dorsal median ridge, and a pre- median plate that is wider than it is long".
Where maturity is an earned status that often carries responsibilities, immaturity is then defined in contrast by the absence of serious responsibility and in its place is the freedom for unmitigated growth. This period of growth is particularly important for humans, who undergo a unique four-stage pattern of development (infancy, childhood, juvenility, adolescence) that has been theorized to confer a number of evolutionarily competitive benefits (Locke & Bogin, 2006). In infancy, motor development stretches long into the early years of life, necessitating that young infants rely on their mothers almost entirely. This state of helplessness provides for an intensely close bond between infant and mother, where separation is infrequent and babies are rarely out of a caregiver's arms.
They also noted that the base of the skull stopped growing with the brain by the end of juvenility, whereas in chimps it continues growing with the rest of the body into adulthood; and considered this evidence of a switch from a gross skeletal anatomy trajectory to a neurological development trajectory due to selective pressure for sociability. Nonetheless, their conclusions are highly speculative. According to Scott Simpson, the Gona Project's physical anthropologist, the fossil evidence from the Middle Awash indicates that both A. kadabba and A. ramidus lived in "a mosaic of woodland and grasslands with lakes, swamps and springs nearby," but further research is needed to determine which habitat Ardipithecus at Gona preferred.
They also noted that the base of the skull stopped growing with the brain by the end of juvenility, whereas in chimps it continues growing with the rest of the body into adulthood; and considered this evidence of a switch from a gross skeletal anatomy trajectory to a neurological development trajectory due to selective pressure for sociability. Nonetheless, their conclusions are highly speculative. Hypothetical restoration of a female Ardipithecus using a hammer and anvil to crack open a nut American primatologist Craig Stanford postulated that A. ramidus behaved similarly to chimps, which frequent both the trees and the ground, have a polygynous society, hunt cooperatively, and are the most technologically advanced non-human. However, Clark and Henneberg concluded that Ardipithecus cannot be compared to chimps, having been too similar to humans.

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