reproduction

[ree-pruh-duhk-shuh n] /ˌri prəˈdʌk ʃən/
noun
1.
the act or process of reproducing.
2.
the state of being reproduced.
3.
something made by reproducing an original; copy; duplicate:
a photographic reproduction; a reproduction of a Roman vase.
4.
Biology. the natural process among organisms by which new individuals are generated and the species perpetuated.
Origin
1650-60; re- + production
Related forms
nonreproduction, noun
self-reproduction, noun
Synonyms
3. replica, facsimile. 4. generation, propagation.
Examples from the web for reproduction
  • Mechanical and, more recently, digital reproduction have increased greatly the capacity to copy images.
  • In other words, reproduction was necessary for her marriage to survive.
  • In this case, the ability to control fertility, which revealed the desire to limit reproduction.
  • reproduction is one important tool for the survival of human species.
  • The females' hiding is likely due to the burdens of reproduction.
  • Staying alive is expensive, using resources that might otherwise be devoted to reproduction.
  • Each winner receives a reproduction of the sculpture.
  • Elephant researchers believe they can boost captive-animal reproduction rates and reverse a potential population crash in zoos.
  • It contains off-color innuendoes about human and plant reproduction.
  • Not simply the reproduction of imagined disciplinary boundaries.
British Dictionary definitions for reproduction

reproduction

/ˌriːprəˈdʌkʃən/
noun
1.
(biology) any of various processes, either sexual or asexual, by which an animal or plant produces one or more individuals similar to itself
2.
  1. an imitation or facsimile of a work of art, esp of a picture made by photoengraving
  2. (as modifier): a reproduction portrait Sometimes shortened to repro
3.
the quality of sound from an audio system: this amplifier gives excellent reproduction
4.
the act or process of reproducing
5.
the state of being reproduced
6.
a revival of an earlier production, as of a play
Word Origin and History for reproduction
n.

1650s, "act of forming again," noun of action from reproduce. Of generation of living things, from 1782; of sounds, from 1908. Meaning "a copy" is from 1807.

reproduction in Medicine

reproduction re·pro·duc·tion (rē'prə-dŭk'shən)
n.

  1. The act of reproducing or the condition or process of being reproduced.

  2. Recall of a memory.

  3. The sexual or asexual process by which organisms generate others of the same kind.

reproduction in Science
reproduction
  (rē'prə-dŭk'shən)   
The process by which cells and organisms produce other cells and organisms of the same kind. ◇ The reproduction of organisms by the union of male and female reproductive cells (gametes) is called sexual reproduction. Many unicellular and most multicellular organisms reproduce sexually. ◇ Reproduction in which offspring are produced by a single parent, without the union of reproductive cells, is called asexual reproduction. The fission (splitting) of bacterial cells and the cells of multicellular organisms by mitosis is a form of asexual reproduction, as is the budding of yeast cells and the generation of clones by runners in plants. Many plants and fungi are capable of reproducing both sexually and asexually, as are some animals, such as sponges and aphids.