0 past simple and past participle of mutate --
1 to develop new physical characteristics because of a permanent change in the genes. These changes can happen naturally or can be produced by the use of chemicals or radiation: --
This has created fresh opportunities for nonstate actors and, moreover, the state itself has mutated with much functional devolution promoting the salience of lower-tier authorities.
To calculate the mortality, we accumulate both the number of nodes not mutated, and the total number of nodes.
From the fraction of mutations that are persistent, we can calculate the average number of mutations of previously mutated nodes as follows.
Opportunities for change in information are dependent on interaction between mutated genetic materials within the nucleus (variation) and the environment.
In so doing it mutated its meaning and its points of application.
Cities is a strange, textual beast whose genetic strands are spliced and mutated increasingly as the narrative proceeds.
Take any node vi that is mutated at least once.
Darwinism mutated in a variety of ways, rival evolutionary theories struggled against its dominance, and various highbred varieties appeared.