0 present participle of hatch --
1 to (cause an egg to) break in order to allow a young animal to come out --
2 to make a plan, especially a secret plan: --
Transfer of nonassisted hatched and hatching human blastocysts after in vitro fertilization.
The biopsied blastocyst is put in co-culture again to assess its ability to recover from the biopsy by expanding again and hatching in vitro.
After hatching, aphids passed through two generations before emigrants were born.
For individual researchers, this can provide a "conceptual incubator" for hatching specific brain theories that are both computable and testable.
It needs a hatching rule to extract an inert molecule from its solution.
This is used to support perspective space hatching and edge finding, with the idea of making technical illustrations 'comprehensible'.
Clutches that were not monitored from the first day after egg deposition or not observed daily while hatching were excluded.
Solid line represents the permanent wilting point for chickpea, the dashed line represents the soil's field capacity and the hatching represents the plant available water.