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ancestor
[ an-ses-teror, especially British, -suh-ster ]
noun
- a person from whom one is descended; forebear; progenitor.
- Biology. the actual or hypothetical form or stock from which an organism has developed or descended.
- an object, idea, style, or occurrence serving as a prototype, forerunner, or inspiration to a later one:
The balloon is an ancestor of the modern dirigible.
- a person who serves as an influence or model for another; one from whom mental, artistic, spiritual, etc., descent is claimed:
a philosophical ancestor.
- Law. a person from whom an heir derives an inheritance.
ancestor
/ ˈænsɛstə /
noun
- often plural a person from whom another is directly descended, esp someone more distant than a grandparent; forefather
- an early type of animal or plant from which a later, usually dissimilar, type has evolved
- a person or thing regarded as a forerunner of a later person or thing
the ancestor of the modern camera
Derived Forms
- ˈancestress, noun:feminine
Word History and Origins
Origin of ancestor1
Word History and Origins
Origin of ancestor1
Example Sentences
Although the species was probably not the common ancestor to all ecdysozoans, the authors note, the discovery contributes a significant addition to our understanding of the diversity of life before the so-called Cambrian explosion.
Most Nagas now follow Christianity, but their ancestors were animists who followed different birth and death rituals.
It’s that feeling of studying a photo of an ancestor, marveling at their outfit, trying to decipher who they were through each stylistic detail.
Sometimes the influencers revisit the civil war - who won, what happened - and insult their ancestors and even brag about having killed rivals.
The farther generations get from their immigrant ancestors, Meneses said, the more they want to know their Portuguese roots, because it is “something that distinguishes them from others,” he said.
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