0 past simple and past participle of inseminate
1 to put a male animal's sperm into a female animal, either by the sexual act or by an artificial method
The stages at which human fertilization arrests: microtubule and chromosome configurations in inseminated oocytes which failed to complete fertilization and development in humans.
After culture, some oocytes (onethird) were fixed to examine nuclear maturation; subgroups of oocytes were inseminated or used for glutathione assay.
Cumulus-oocyte complexes were collected from slaughterhouse ovaries, matured, inseminated and subjected to embryo culture in vitro.
Our results indicate that with this improved in vitro system, more than 50% of inseminated oocytes can develop to blastocyst stage.
In a series of experiments, empty zonae were inseminated, then washed thoroughly to remove all spermatozoa from the outer zona surfaces.
In the control group, in contrast, spermatozoa penetrated 29 (36.3%) of 80 diploid embryos inseminated for the first time at the 2-cell stage.
Oocytes were inseminated with spermatozoa that had undergone the spontaneous acrosome reaction in normal medium.
Inseminated females producing no larvae over this 6-day period were considered sterile.