"Quintipara" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Quintipara refers to a rare occurrence in biology where an embryo develops from two ova fertilized by two different male parents, resulting in two sets of chromosomes, one from each pair of parents. This can occur in certain plant species, such as dioecious organisms, where each parent has separate male and female reproductive organs.
Quintic refers to something related to the number 5 or the concept of being fifth in a series or sequence. In mathematics, a quintic polynomial is a polynomial with a degree of 5.
The term "quintiles" refers to the five parts or groups of people or data that are divided when a dataset or a group is split into five equal parts based on a particular measurement or statistic. This division is often used in statistical analysis to group data and understand the distribution of a particular variable within a population.<br><br>For example, in a study surveying the average income of a population, if you divide the data into five quintiles, you might find:<br><br> The first quintile (or lowest 20%) with the lowest average income<br> The second quintile with the next lower average income<br> The third quintile (or median) with the middle average income<br> The fourth quintile with the next higher average income<br> The fifth quintile (or highest 20%) with the highest average income<br><br>Quintiles can also be used in the context of financial markets, such as investment portfolios, where it may refer to the five groups of stocks or bonds sorted by their ratings or performance.
The word "quintupled" is the past tense of the verb "quintuple," which means to make or become five times as large or intense. It is often used to describe a significant increase or multiplication by a factor of five.
A set of five babies born at the same birth.<br><br>Example: "The family was overjoyed at the arrival of their quintuplets."
Quintuplets are a set of five children born at the same birth, to the same mother. This is a rare and unusual occurrence, with a conception rate of about 1 in 55,000. The term "quintuplets" is often reserved for identical quintuplets, or quintuplets that are born from the same placenta and share the same genetic makeup. Non-identical quintuplets, who develop from separate eggs and have different genetic material, are referred to as "heteropatallactically born" or simply "non-identical quintuplets".