prehatch
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]prehatch (not comparable)
- Before the hatching of an egg
- 2008 June 14, Reuters, “Tyson Foods Sues U.S.D.A. Over Antibiotic Rules”, in New York Times[1]:
- The controversy stems from the company’s use of antibiotics for prehatch vaccinations two to three days before its chicks are hatched.
Related terms
[edit]Verb
[edit]prehatch (third-person singular simple present prehatches, present participle prehatching, simple past and past participle prehatched)
- To undergo changes that lead to hatching, such as the rupture of internal membranes as the embryo begins to emerge from the blastoderm cuticle.
- 1963, Edmund Stanislaw Broch, Ecology and Physiology of the Embryonated Egg of the Fairy Shrimp Chirocephalopsis Bundyi Forbes: With Reference to Factors Synchronizing the Life Cycle to the Temporary Pond, Page 132:
- Failure of these eggs to prehatch within 30 days at 7 C is not surprising since it took longer for prehatching to occur in nature under substantially lower temperatures than 7 C.