(20-05-2014, 03:11 PM)AnnieBL Wrote: Lotus, Lovely,
You are both right, Lovely etymologically and Lotus in terms of popular usage. in and sharing the same habitation such that there is an enduring interdependence.
Thank you AnnieBL.
I think you're right. We could both be right, in how the term xenoestrogen is commonly used and its definition. There are not a lot of reliable sources to say what is the case. There is potential for when there is little information out, for definitions to get lumped together, or expanded. I'll agree that Lotus and I have a different belief of what the word means. I can't solidly prove its definition with a reliable source. I apologize to Lotus for the debate. It was argument about word definition and not about physiological function.