Neanderthals in Vietnamese

tính từ
1. người Nê-an-đéc-tan
2. (về người) thiếu ý thức, rừng rú

danh từ
(khinh bỉ) người chưa phát triển, người cực kỳ hủ lậu

Sentence patterns related to "Neanderthals"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "Neanderthals" from the English - Vietnamese Medical Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "Neanderthals", or refer to the context using the word "Neanderthals" in the English - Vietnamese Medical Dictionary.

1. The Neanderthals seemed unexpectedly gentle and diffident people.

2. Evidence of the first human habitation of the area by Neanderthals dates back to 125,000 years ago.

Bằng chứng về nơi cư trú đầu tiên của con người trong khu vực của người Neanderthal có từ 125.000 năm trước.

3. They know it makes the state look like a bunch of Neanderthals, with such a barbaric method.

4. No matter which prehistoric thriller sells more copies, this is just the beginning of the battle of the Neanderthals.

5. If you look at our ancestors, the Neanderthals and the Homo erectus, our immediate ancestors, they're confined to small regions of the world.

6. The fossils were reappraised as representing an archaic form of Homo sapiens or perhaps a population of Homo sapiens that had interbred with Neanderthals.

Các hóa thạch được tái đánh giá là đại diện cho một dạng cổ xưa của Homo sapiens hoặc có lẽ là một quần thể Homo sapiens đã liên kết với người Neanderthal.

7. The Arabians have more ancestry (than Levantines) from Africans, who didn’t mix with Neanderthals, and from Natufians, who were the prehistoric inhabitants of the Levant, including Israel

8. The most striking physical feature of Cretins and Neanderthals is bone thickness; in Cretins, arm and leg bones stop growing in length but continue to grow concentrically

9. There are some traces of bone fossils by Neanderthals as well as by anatomically modern humans, which suggest Anthropophagism (now called instead of cannibalism).In this respect: YES.

10. Definition: The Aurignacian period (40,000 to 28,000 years ago) is an Upper Paleolithic stone tool tradition, usually considered associated with both Homo sapiens and Neanderthals throughout Europe and parts of Africa.

11. It is known that modern humans and Neanderthals had been separated for about 750,000 years when they started interbreeding and the super-Archaics and Neanderthal-Denisovan ancestors were separated for well over a million years.

12. Moreover, anatomically modern populations shared a number of these innovations with Neanderthals, which many anthropologists and geneticists consider a different species, or a human type inherently incapable of reaching our cognitive level.

13. Once known as Apelike barbarians, the Irish were now able to show themselves as the most selfless and patriotic civil servants. A Renegade History of the United States Beer ads show men grunting like neanderthals, repeating the same word moronically, and generally reveling in a kind of Apelike idiocy.

14. And then these earlier forms of humans disappear, but they live on a little bit today in some of us -- in that people outside of Africa have two and a half percent of their DNA from Neanderthals, and people in Melanesia actually have an additional five percent approximately from the Denisovans.

15. The Aurignacians were Homo sapiens; anatomically modern people who, like all of our current population, had the capacity to adapt and integrate into a wide range of geographical and chronological areas. Their arrival in Europe prior to 40,000 BP meant that they coexisted for some time with Neanderthals, particularly in the south-east of Europe.

16. In fact, the title of “mere Caveman” may be in jeopardy, as researchers recently unearthed a complex dwelling made from mammoth bones, which wasn’t in a cave at all.3 With all the similarities, however, Neanderthals weren’t exactly like us—their physical characteristics (such as larger brows in adults and wide nasal cavities) would

17. Neanderthals and Homo sapiens could not have Coexisted for more than a millennium in the Cantabrian Region, which reduces significantly the possibilities for interaction between the two groups and tends to reinforce the hypothesis of an intrinsic cause of extinction, according to a study based on radiocarbon dates from thirteen archaeological sites in this area of southwestern Europe.