How to Use medusa in a Sentence

medusa

noun
  • The soft, circular body, known as the medusa, rests on the seafloor while just a few short, tentacles float above them.
    Hannah Knighton, Smithsonian Magazine, 13 Feb. 2020
  • The medusa danced before her, flaunting its translucent skirts.
    L. S. Asekoff, Harper's magazine, 19 Aug. 2019
  • Gold thought that genes unique to jellyfish would be active during the transformation from polyp to medusa.
    Quanta Magazine, 8 Jan. 2019
  • What isn’t known is the maximum number of times, if there is a maximum, that a medusa can regenerate, Dr. Pascual Torner said.
    Ginger Adams Otis, WSJ, 29 Aug. 2022
  • Gold explained that the medusa stage represents a quantum leap in complexity.
    Quanta Magazine, 8 Jan. 2019
  • To go from being a stationary polyp to a floating medusa is almost akin to humans evolving the ability to swim through the air and capture birds with springy, netlike appendages.
    Quanta Magazine, 8 Jan. 2019
  • For now, Turritopsis dohrnii is the only known animal that can develop in reverse, transforming from a medusa back to a polyp.
    Discover Magazine, 3 June 2015
  • If so, scientists are hopeful that once conditions in the lake improve, a new generation will again produce the free swimming adult medusa that so delight tourists.
    National Geographic, 4 May 2016
  • In the 1990s Italian researchers discovered that Turritopsis dorhnii, a jellyfish the size of a pen tip, reverts back and forth from a medusa to a polyp, earning the nickname the immortal jellyfish.
    Martin Shields, National Geographic, 2 Mar. 2016
  • In the 1990s Italian researchers discovered that Turritopsis dorhnii, a jellyfish the size of a pen tip, reverts back and forth from a medusa to a polyp, earning the nickname the immortal jellyfish.
    National Geographic, 2 Mar. 2016
  • Ordinarily, jellyfish are born from eggs and grow into larvae, which morph into polyps before becoming free-swimming medusa.
    Erica Tennenhouse, Discover Magazine, 8 Aug. 2018

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'medusa.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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