Zygote

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Zygote (from Ancient Greek ζυγωτός (zygōtós) 'joined, yoked', from ζυγοῦν (zygoun) 'to join, to yoke')[1] is a eukaryotic cell formed by a fertilization event between two gametes. The zygote's genome is a combination of the DNA in each gamete, and contains all of the genetic information of a new individual organism.

adjacency, conjugation, moiety.

Etymology

The root zāy wāw jīm (ز و ج), according to corpus.quran.com, is used in Quran 81 times.

1. Compare with Engl. zygote - zygote, a diploid cell formed by fertilization, derived from org/wiki/ζυγόω#Ancient_Greek ζυγόω - zigóo - to yoke, to join together, to yoke, to join together, further from ζυγόν - zugón - yoke, harness, unite, burden, yoke, from Proto-Hindo Hebrew. yugóm - yoke, bridle, yoke, yoke, yoga, and eventually to the zero mark Quranic root zāy wāw jīm (ز و ج);

2. Compare with Ego, the middle instance in the psychoanalytic scheme of the vertical layered construction of personality, serving as a mediator (liaison) between the Id (claims of instincts and drives) and the super-ego ('For us the super-ego is the embodiment of all moral limitations, the champion of the pursuit of perfection, in short, that which has become psychologically tangible to us of the so-called higher in human life Sigmund Freud). Ego - The regulator of conscious mental activity in the relationship between the individual and the outside world;

3. Compare with Sanskrit. योग - yóga is the act of pairing, joining, attaching, harnessing a horse, yoke, yoga, concentration of thoughts, abstract contemplation, meditation, self-concentration, (grammar) putting words together;

4. Compare with the Greek. ἑκάτερος both, one of two, each separately. In Greek mythology, Hecaterus or Hecateros - a minor god, and father of five daughters - Hecaterides - Hecaterides.

5. Adjacency;

6. Moiety;

7. yoke;

8. conjugation;

9. each;