Embryo

multicellular diploid eukaryote in its earliest stage of development
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An embryo is the earliest stage in the development of a fertilised egg (the zygote). It is the term used for any animal or plant,[1] from the first cell division until birth, or hatching, or germination in plants.

Frog embryos
This is what a human embryo looks like six weeks after conception
Inside a Ginkgo seed is an embryo, with the beginnings of leaves and a stem.

In humans, it is called an embryo until about eight weeks after fertilization, and from then until birth it is called a foetus (US: fetus).

The development of the embryo is called embryogenesis, and the study of embryos is called embryology.[2] The development of an embryo passes through various stages: the blastula, a hollow ball of cells; the gastrula, migration of cells; morphogenesis; tissue differentiation, and so on.

In organisms that reproduce sexually, once a sperm fertilizes an egg cell, the result is a cell called the zygote, which has DNA from each of the two parents. In plants, animals, and some protists, the zygote divides by mitosis to produce an embryo.

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References

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  1. technically, any multicellular diploid eukaryote
  2. "Embryo (Human and Animal)". Encyclopædia Britannica. 10 May 2018.