Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • noun Any of the cells that give rise through mitosis to the oocytes and are found in the ovaries of vertebrates.
  • noun A female reproductive structure in certain thallophytes and in oomycetes, usually a rounded cell or sac containing one or more oospheres.

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun In botany, the female sexual organ in certain cryptogamic plants.
  • noun In zoology: The primordial mother-cell which gives rise to the ovum and its follicle.
  • noun One of the youngest ovarian cells, characterized by having in its nucleus the same number of chromosomes as in the nuclei of the somatic or body-cells. The oögonia, which eventually give rise to the primary oöcytes, are homologous in the oögenesis with the spermatogonia in the spermatogenesis of the male animal of the same species.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • noun (Bot.) A special cell in certain cryptogamous plants containing oöspheres, as in the rockweeds (Fucus), and the orders Vaucherieæ and Peronosporeæ.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun biology An immature ovarian egg within a developing fetus

Etymologies

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

[oo– + New Latin gonium, cell (from Greek gonos, seed; see gono–).]

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Examples

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  • ~ Primitive differentiated female gamete which gives rise to oocytes. Singular of oogonia.

    ~ An immature ovum. It is a female gametogonium.

    ~ Oogonia are formed in large numbers by mitosis early in fetal life from primordial germ cells, which are present in the fetus between weeks 4 and 8. Oogonia are present in the fetus between weeks 5 and 30.

    ~ Oogonia are also the female reproductive structures in certain thallophytes, and are usually rounded cells or sacs containing one or more oospheres.

    January 18, 2009