Dictionary
are kin
noun
Race; family; breed; kind.
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Exact(29)
And he takes that understanding further: we are kin to all organic life forms, extant and extinct.
Desmond and Moore concentrate on the human implications of Darwin's argument that all life-forms are kin.
Of great poets whose poems are kin to Clifton's, I think of Emily Dickinson; to Dickinson's intense compression Clifton adds explicit historical consciousness.
The migrants are single-celled green algae; they are kin to seaweed, but instead of living in the sea they live in snow.
His protagonists are kin to the hapless figures of Keaton (whom Mr. Etaix admires), but they move cautiously through a recognizable bourgeois world.
The nonfunctional portholes on the Buick are kin to the equally gimmicky, if gorgeous, chrome vents on the hood of the '63 Corvette, which Cherry pointed out to me at the auto show.
Similar(30)
Formally, they're kin.
"To begin with, everyone is kin to everyone who's running, and everyone is against everyone running who is kin to them, if you follow me".
Only Washington freed his slaves, although Jefferson freed a few favorites, most of whom were kin.
However, it is kin to the North American merganser and may find an American mate.
Mento is kin to old calypso and other Afro-Caribbean rhythms.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com