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sperm
1[spurm]
sperm-
2variant of spermo- before a vowel.
spermine.
sperm
3[spurm]
-sperm
4a combining form with the meaning “one having seeds” of the kind specified by the initial element.
gymnosperm.
sperm
1/ spɜːm /
noun
short for sperm whale spermaceti sperm oil
-sperm
2combining form
(in botany) a seed
gymnosperm
sperm
3/ spɜːm /
noun
another name for semen
a male reproductive cell; male gamete
sperm
The smaller, usually motile male reproductive cell of most organisms that reproduce sexually. Sperm cells are haploid (they have half the number of chromosomes as the other cells in the organism's body). Sperm often have at least one flagellum. During fertilization, the nucleus of a sperm fuses with the nucleus of the much larger egg cell (the female reproductive cell) to form a new organism. In male animals, sperm are normally produced by the testes in extremely large numbers in order to increase the chances of fertilizing an egg. Motile sperm cells produced by some multicellular protist groups (such as the algae), the bryophyte plants, and the seedless vascular plants, require water to swim to the egg cell. In gymnosperms and angiosperms, sperm do not need water for mobility but are carried to the female reproductive organs in the pollen grain. In the cycads and the gingko (both gymnosperms), the sperm are motile and propel themselves down the pollen tube to reach the egg cell. In the conifers and angiosperms, the sperm are not themselves motile but are conveyed to the ovule by the growing pollen tube.
sperm
The male sex cell, typically consisting of a head, midpiece, and tail. (See fertilization.)
Other Word Forms
- -spermous combining form
Word History and Origins
Origin of sperm1
Origin of sperm2
Word History and Origins
Origin of sperm1
A Closer Look
Example Sentences
Another set of appendages, called pedipalps, are used to transfer sperm.
Chad, Thad, Itsy, Bitsy and Mitzi, along with other members of the lucky sperm club, can now inherit $30 million tax-free from their moms and dads without having to work a day in their lives.
Genetic mutations that can cause disease become increasingly common in sperm as men grow older, and new evidence suggests this happens because certain DNA changes are actually favored during sperm production, according to new research.
In a major study published on October 8 in Nature, scientists from the Wellcome Sanger Institute and the TwinsUK study at King's College London mapped how harmful DNA mutations accumulate across the entire sperm genome as men age.
Until recently, however, scientists lacked the precise tools to measure how strongly certain mutations are favored in sperm.
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When To Use
Sperm- is a combining form used like a prefix representing “sperm.” Sperm are the reproductive cells contained in semen. Sperm- means "sperm" both literally and figuratively, as in "germ" or "seed." It is occasionally used in scientific terms, especially in biology.Sperm- comes from the Greek spérma, meaning “seed.”What are variants of sperm-?Sperm- is a variant of spermo-, which loses its -o- when combined with words or word elements beginning with vowels.The forms spermi- and spermato- are also combining forms from Greek spérma that are variously used to mean "sperm" or "seed."Related combining forms used as suffixes include -sperm, -spermal, -spermic, and -spermous.Want to learn more? Check out our Words That Use entries for each of these seven forms.
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