cline

listen to the pronunciation of cline
English - Turkish
(Biyoloji-Genetik) Birbiri ile akraba organizmaların basamaklı olarak fizyolojik ve morfolojik açıdan genellikle coğrafik yada çevresel koşullar nedeniyle değişmesi
(Biyoloji-Genetik) Bir coğrafyadaki bir tür ya da taksonun bir ya da daha fazla karakteristiğinde görülen dereceli değişim
(Dilbilim) ölçümlü
(Denizbilim) arı balığı
clinal
(Biyoloji-Genetik) Bir coğrafyadaki bir tür ya da taksonun bir ya da daha fazla karakteristiğinde görülen dereceli değişim ile ilgili
English - English
A gradation in a character or phenotype within a species or other group
Any graduated continuum

This account effectively reconstructs the well-known grammaticalisation cline from anaphora to agreement, ….

1. (Biol.) A gradation in one or more characters within a species or other taxon.2. (gen.) A continuum with an infinite number of gradations
American singer best known for country and western ballads such as "I Fall to Pieces" (1960) and "Crazy" (1961). a series of very small differences in a group of things of the same kind = continuum (klinein )
A gradual and continual change in a structural or functional character exhibited by a series of populations or throughout the range of a species, usually along a line of geographic or environmental gradient, in which individuals at the two extremes differ markedly
A gradual shift in gene frequencies between neighboring populations
{i} continuous sequence between two extreme; continuous series of differences in function or structure displayed by members of a species along a line that extends from one end of their range to another
1 A geographic gradient exhibited by plants usually assumed to be genetically controlled 2 Continuous character variations (genetically based) that are related to environmental gradients However, the term cline is not a taxonomic category
Americn geneticist who succeeded in transferring a functioning gene from one mouse to another (born in 1934)
clinal
Pertaining to beds or rest
clinal
Describing a torsion angle between 30° and 150°
Patsy Cline
a US country and western singer who died in a plane crash (1932-63). orig. Virginia Patterson Hensley born Sept. 8, 1932, Winchester, Va., U.S. died March 5, 1963, near Camden, Tenn. U.S. singer. Cline sang with country music groups as a teenager. She began recording in the mid-1950s and won first place on Arthur Godfrey's television show with "Walking After Midnight" (1957), a hit that made her the first female country singer to cross over into pop music. In 1960 she joined the Grand Ole Opry. After recovering from injuries sustained in a car crash, she returned in 1962 with hits such as "I Fall to Pieces" and "Crazy." She was killed in an airplane crash
clinal
Pertaining to a cline
clines
Traits that changes continuously over time and/or space; may refer to a linguistic, environmental or geographic change
cline

    Turkish pronunciation

    klayn

    Pronunciation

    /ˈklīn/ /ˈklaɪn/

    Etymology

    () From Ancient Greek κλίνειν (klínein, “to lean, incline”).
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