Aberrant
departing from the right, normal, or usual course.
deviating from the ordinary, usual, or normal type; exceptional; abnormal.
an aberrant person, thing, group, etc.
contemporary examples
turmeric could have important abilities in healing and preventing brain damage—or this could be an aberrant finding.
fish oil, turmeric, and ginseng, oh my! are ‘brain foods’ b.s.? dr. anand veeravagu, md october 9, 2014
historical examples
with an inhuman disregard of caste and custom, the aberrant shadows of the p-ssers-by met and mingled one into another.
phases of an inferior planet ellen glasgow
it means that only the parent, which is presumably not immortal, is aberrant.
greener than you think ward moore
it appears to “offer a number of transitional characters between the more typical procyonidae and the aberrant cercoleptes.”
the cambridge natural history, vol x., mammalia frank evers beddard
the aberrant forms then cease to be, and the mores become uniform.
folkways william graham sumner
if there has been inheritance here, marked and aberrant variation is also observed.
prehistoric man w. l. h. duckworth
besides the lemurs the group includes the aberrant tarsius and chiromys.
the vertebrate skeleton sidney h. reynolds
we have elsewhere shewn that all aberrant forms unite into a circle of their own.
zoological ill-strations, or original figures and descriptions. volume iii, second series william swainson
there are also some aberrant types which possess complex or mult-tubercular teeth.
degeneracy eugene s. talbot
upon the whole, the zuni seems to be most aberrant of the group—saving the moqui, which has decided paduca affinities.
opuscula robert gordon latham
adjective
deviating from the normal or usual type, as certain animals from the group in which they are cl-ssified
behaving in an abnormal or untypical way
deviating from truth, morality, etc
adj.
1798, originally in natural history, from latin aberrantem (nominative aberrans), present participle of aberrare “to wander away, go astray” (see aberration).
aberrant ab·er·rant (ā-běr’ənt, āb’ər-)
adj.
deviating from the usual course, as certain ducts, vessels, or nerves.
deviating from the normal; untrue to type.
out of place; ectopic.
ab·er’ran·cy n.
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departing from the right, normal, or usual course. deviating from the ordinary, usual, or normal type; exceptional; abnormal. an aberrant person, thing, group, etc. adjective deviating from the normal or usual type, as certain animals from the group in which they are cl-ssified behaving in an abnormal or untypical way deviating from truth, morality, etc […]
- Aberrancies
departing from the right, normal, or usual course. deviating from the ordinary, usual, or normal type; exceptional; abnormal. an aberrant person, thing, group, etc. historical examples thus they commonly affect no man any further than he deserts his reason, or complies with their aberrancies. the works of sir thomas browne (volume 1 of 3) thomas […]
- Aberrancy
departing from the right, normal, or usual course. deviating from the ordinary, usual, or normal type; exceptional; abnormal. an aberrant person, thing, group, etc. adjective deviating from the normal or usual type, as certain animals from the group in which they are cl-ssified behaving in an abnormal or untypical way deviating from truth, morality, etc […]
- Aberrant goiter
aberrant goiter aberrant goiter n. enlargement of a supernumerary or ectopic thyroid gland.
- Aberrant ductule
aberrant ductule aberrant ductule n. any of the diverticula of the epididymis. also called aberrant duct.