Autochthonous
pertaining to autochthons; aboriginal; indigenous (opposed to ).
pathology.
found in the part of the body in which it originates, as a cancerous lesion.
found in a locality in which it originates, as an infectious disease.
psychology. of or relating to ideas that arise independently of the individual’s own train of thought and seem instead to have some alien or external agency as their source.
geology. (of rocks, minerals, etc.) formed in the region where found.
compare .
historical examples
thrombi are also divided into primitive, or autochthonous, and secondary varieties.
a system of practical medicine by american authors, vol. i various
intentionally, and to a certain extent, rimsky’s work is autochthonous.
musical portraits paul rosenfeld
sometimes the cultural change was an autochthonous development.
a book-lover’s holidays in the open theodore roosevelt
apparently from mother earth herself they had come, autochthonous.
where the trail divides will lillibridge
it is not probable that the eupatrid families were all autochthonous, even in the loose sense of that term.
encyclopaedia britannica, 11th edition, volume 9, slice 8 various
if any of the autochthonous idlers asked him what he called himself, he replied shortly, “an engineer.”
tess of the d’urbervilles thomas hardy
smilisca is an excellent example of an autochthonous middle american genus.
neotropical hylid frogs, genus smilisca william e. duellman
everything shows that the civilizations and religions of mexico and peru are autochthonous, springing from the soil itself.
lectures on the origin and growth of religion as ill-strated by the native religions of mexico and peru albert rville
the egyptians, however, like the ancient greeks, regarded themselves as autochthonous.
the world’s progress, vol. i (of x) various
in both cases the eastern region is vastly richer in genera and species, as well as in autochthonous forms, than the western.
a guide to the study of fishes, volume 1 (of 2) david starr jordan
adjective
(of rocks, deposits, etc) found where they and their const-tuents were formed compare allochthonous
inhabiting a place or region from earliest known times; aboriginal
(physiol) (of some functions, such as heartbeat) originating within an organ rather than from external stimulation
adj.
“native, indigenous,” 1845, from autochthon + -ous.
autochthonous au·toch·tho·nous (ô-tŏk’thə-nəs)
adj.
native to the place inhabited; indigenous.
originating in the place where found. used of a disease originating in the part of the body where found, or of a disease acquired in the place where the patient is.
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