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"prepotency" Definitions
  1. the quality or state of being prepotent : PREDOMINANCE
  2. unusual ability of an individual or strain to transmit its characters to offspring because of homozygosity for numerous dominant genes

26 Sentences With "prepotency"

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

But this epoch of Ghibelline prepotency in Tuscany was brief.
Wilson, Dr., prepotency of the Manx over the common cat, ii.
Sturm, prepotency of transmission of characters in sheep and cattle, ii.
His list contained five needs in a hierarchy of prepotency, viz.
But the Noveschi were by no means prepared to relinquish their prepotency.
An adjunction of characteristics, moral prepotency of his father, physical likeness to his mother.
He is the world's best example of prepotency, since he alone founded the Morgan breed.
When we consider latent characters, the explanation of this form of prepotency will be obvious.
The truth of the principle of prepotency comes out more clearly when certain races are crossed.
The law of prepotency comes into action when species are crossed, as with races and individuals.
Prior to February 2000, there were three different and competing staff organizations that could claim prepotency in Korea.
I suppose you will answer that the European forms are prepotent, but this is riding prepotency to death.
The Cleveland Bay's accomplishments and their prepotency prompted their use as foundation stock or improvement sires for other breeds.
In the two previous chapters, when discussing reversion and prepotency, I was necessarily led to give many facts on crossing.
It is therefore not surprising that every one hitherto has been baffled in drawing up general rules on the subject of prepotency.
Escudo I continues the old Hanoverian E-bloodline with his prepotency, and he was of tremendous importance for the modern jumper horse breed.
But they turn delusional in imagining that military prepotency and projections of armed force will reduce China to a marginal player in the region.
This change of mentality has also extended to the indigenous people of the Amazon that have been, during last centuries, victims of prepotency and voracity.
A more realistic description of the hierarchy would be in terms of the decreasing percentages of satisfaction as we go up in the hierarchy of prepotency.
Cleveland Bay, breed of horse notable for its strength, endurance, and beauty and for its prepotency i.e., its ability to impart these characteristics to both purebred and crossbred progeny.
Figure is thought to have stood about 14 hh (1.42 m), and to have weighed about 950 lb (430 kg). He was known for his prepotency, passing on his distinctive looks, conformation, temperament, and athleticism.
Cecily Norden and W.J. van der Merwe were Secretary and Chairman of this newly formed Society, and, during these years, abundant publicity ensured that Middelburg District became the centre of Arab Horse Breeding in South Africa, home to top quality imported Arabian stallions, including the fountain-head sire, Jiddan, whose offspring, mainly mares, formed the basis of many studs due to their great prepotency.
He was known for his prepotency, passing on his distinctive looks, conformation, temperament, and athleticism. His exact pedigree is unknown, although extensive efforts have been made to discover his parentage. One historian notes that the writings on the possibility of his sire being a Thoroughbred named Beautiful Bay would "fill 41 detective novels and a membership application for the Liars' Club." In 1821, Figure was kicked by another horse and later died of his injuries.
In Le docteur Pascal, Maxime is described as prematurely aged, afraid of pleasure and indeed of all life, devoid of emotion, and cold, characteristics introduced in L'argent. Maxime is described as a "dissemination" of characteristics, having the moral prepotency of his father and the pampered egotism of his mother (Saccard's first wife). Victor, on the other hand, brought up in squalor, is the furthest extreme Zola illustrates of the Rougon family's degeneracy. Like his great-grandmother Tante Dide, Victor suffers from neuralgic attacks.
It is hard to see > why the appropriation of intellectual property rights should be any > different. Lord Hoffman then commented: > It is hard to escape the conclusion that although Lord Bridge felt driven to > accept that Parliament had created intellectual property rights which > covered the manufacture of three-dimensional parts by reverse engineering, > he felt free to remedy what he saw as a legislative error by treating such > rights as an inferior species of property which could be subordinated to the > right to repair one’s motor car. Such prepotency over statute has not yet > been accorded in this country even to human rights such as free speech. Lord Hoffman then turned to the speech of Lord Templeman, of which he was also critical.
When the station was opened, the town was named Majibacoa, but again the American prepotency prevailed and a new board with the name of Omaha appeared overnight - in allusion to a tribe of red skins - the Cubans rejected the interference and after several changes Omaja prevailed. The 1919 census reveals Omaja's population consisted of 2, 381 inhabitants, it had 13 trades, three hotels, a phone center, a silent cinema, two bakeries, two cemeteries (one for the Cubans and another for the Americans), a Ford agency, two saw-mills, and a shop of cabinetmakers. In 1920, the political violence between the conservatives and the liberals, and the bank moratorium put an end to the accomplished attempts of neo- colonization. In 1928, with the construction of the Central Highway, Omaja's decadence began to end.

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