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Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
totipotent

1896, from Latin toti-, comb. form of totus "whole" (see total (adj.)) + potent. Perhaps immediately from German totipotent, which is attested by 1893. Related: Totipotency.

Wiktionary
totipotent

a. (context biology English) Exhibiting totipotency

WordNet
totipotent

adj. having the ability to give rise to unlike cells; "embryonic stem cells are totipotent"

Usage examples of "totipotent".

We filled the molds with water, nutrients, and nourishing electrical currents, then inoculated them with totipotent cells.

Softcores huddle together in planetary labyrinths, gradually transforming their huge egg-layers into lumpen fleshcores, as innocently ingenious as only a mass of totipotent protoplasm can be, dwelling almost entirely in the inner space of the mind and shunning the outer space of air and ether.

The Totipotent Man, that apotheosis of individuality and complete psychosomatic development, the democratic Vber-mensch, as recommended by Rex Luscus, the sexually one-sided?