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chordates

  1. Animals that have a central nerve like the human spinal cord.



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Chordates make up a phylum in the animal kingdom that includes all the vertebrates, along with some primitive wormlike sea animals. (See Linnean classification.)
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Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Swalla studies the evolution of chordates, the phylum that includes both vertebrates and tunicates.

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During the Cambrian, which began about 540 million years ago, nearly all modern animal groups—as diverse as mollusks and chordates—leapt into the fossil record.

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Some of the problems that once stalled progress — such as uncertainty over which groups belong in the deuterostome lineage of animals alongside chordates — have largely been resolved.

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Having established a hazy picture of the earliest chordates, Gee focuses on building vertebrates and their defining features from the basic chordate body plan, for example through spectacular innovations in the vertebrate head.

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The morphological divide between chordates and their closest relatives remains perilously large, and even with new advances, Gee’s hypothesis is a good contender; but it is not the only one, so the bridge to early chordates remains a little wobbly.

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chorda tendineachord chart