mammal
n. member of the class Mammalia (class of warm-blooded vertebrate animals the female of which secrete milk to feed their young and characterized by a covering of hair on their bodies) | ||||
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Mammals definition was found in categories: Language, Idioms & Slang(3) Religion & Spirituality(1) Science & Technology(1) Encyclopedia(1)
Mammals Definition from Language, Idioms & Slang Dictionaries & Glossaries
| Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) |
Mammals
(pl. )
of Mammal
(pl. )
of Mammal
| WordNet 2.0 |
mammal
Noun
1. any warm-blooded vertebrate having the skin more or less covered with hair; young are born alive except for the small subclass of monotremes and nourished with milk
(hypernym) vertebrate, craniate
(hyponym) female mammal
(member-holonym) Mammalia, class Mammalia
(part-meronym) coat, pelage
(class) digitigrade
Noun
1. any warm-blooded vertebrate having the skin more or less covered with hair; young are born alive except for the small subclass of monotremes and nourished with milk
(hypernym) vertebrate, craniate
(hyponym) female mammal
(member-holonym) Mammalia, class Mammalia
(part-meronym) coat, pelage
(class) digitigrade
| hEnglish - advanced version |
Mammals Definition from Religion & Spirituality Dictionaries & Glossaries
| Rakefet |
Mammals
Mammals The highest class of animals produced from man, himself a mammal, in this fourth round. The evolutionary plan, as regards the passing of life-waves around the planetary chain entails that so far as the human and animal kingdoms are concerned, in the fourth round man shall appear before the mammals on globe D of the earth-chain. The other stocks of the animal kingdom were at the beginning of this round represented by their various sishtas, as in fact man himself was. In each round after the first, each one of the kingdoms or life-waves on entering a globe of the chain, does so in its regular serial order.
The man of the second and early third root-race, though distinctly belonging to the human kingdom, was different from the truly human man of today, as much in his inner psychical apparatus as in his astral-vital-physical body. This body was then much more astral or tenuous than that of today, composed of life-atoms of all kinds, seeking manifestation and finding a temporary habitat in the human body, which thus becomes their host. These atoms were continuously entering and leaving the body, just as happens in the human body today, but with this difference -- that the atoms which the human body throws off today are far more stamped with the person's own svabhava (individual, personal characteristics) than formerly, and they are in consequence strongly and continuously attracted back to their human host, who is often their source. But in those early races the various monadic entities, which in their evolution were far inferior to the human monad, and each of which expressed itself through a life-atom, were in consequence far more free from the human dominating , almost tyrannical control, for then man had not yet acquired his present power of strongly impressing his own stamp on these life-atoms.
to be continue "Mammals2 "
Mammals The highest class of animals produced from man, himself a mammal, in this fourth round. The evolutionary plan, as regards the passing of life-waves around the planetary chain entails that so far as the human and animal kingdoms are concerned, in the fourth round man shall appear before the mammals on globe D of the earth-chain. The other stocks of the animal kingdom were at the beginning of this round represented by their various sishtas, as in fact man himself was. In each round after the first, each one of the kingdoms or life-waves on entering a globe of the chain, does so in its regular serial order.
The man of the second and early third root-race, though distinctly belonging to the human kingdom, was different from the truly human man of today, as much in his inner psychical apparatus as in his astral-vital-physical body. This body was then much more astral or tenuous than that of today, composed of life-atoms of all kinds, seeking manifestation and finding a temporary habitat in the human body, which thus becomes their host. These atoms were continuously entering and leaving the body, just as happens in the human body today, but with this difference -- that the atoms which the human body throws off today are far more stamped with the person's own svabhava (individual, personal characteristics) than formerly, and they are in consequence strongly and continuously attracted back to their human host, who is often their source. But in those early races the various monadic entities, which in their evolution were far inferior to the human monad, and each of which expressed itself through a life-atom, were in consequence far more free from the human dominating , almost tyrannical control, for then man had not yet acquired his present power of strongly impressing his own stamp on these life-atoms.
to be continue "Mammals2 "
Mammals Definition from Science & Technology Dictionaries & Glossaries
| Common Terms in Evolutionary Biology and Genetics |
Mammals
One of the eight Classes in the Phylum Chordata which contains approximately 4500 species in 15 Orders. In mammals, the fertilization of the egg is internal, the young develops within the body of the mother, and is fed by milk produced by the mammary glands. The mammals are warm-blooded and the body is covered with hair.
One of the eight Classes in the Phylum Chordata which contains approximately 4500 species in 15 Orders. In mammals, the fertilization of the egg is internal, the young develops within the body of the mother, and is fed by milk produced by the mammary glands. The mammals are warm-blooded and the body is covered with hair.
Mammals Definition from Encyclopedia Dictionaries & Glossaries
| Wikipedia English - The Free Encyclopedia |
Mammal
Mammals (class Mammalia) are warm-blooded, vertebrate animals characterized by the presence of sweat glands, including those that produce milk, and by the presence of: hair, three middle ear bones used in hearing, and a neocortex region in the brain. Most mammals also possess specialized teeth and utilize a placenta in the ontogeny. The mammalian brain regulates endothermic and circulatory systems, including a four-chambered heart. Mammals encompass approximately 5,400 species (including humans), distributed in about 1,200 genera, 153 families, and 29 orders, though this varies by classification scheme.
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