ÉTYMOLOGIE DU MOT ASCIDIUM
From New Latin, from Greek askidion a little bag, from askos bag.
MOTS EN ANGLAIS EN RAPPORT AVEC «ASCIDIUM»
ascidium
ascidium
botany
pitcher
shaped
bottle
part
organ
such
hollow
tubular
leaf
plant
merriam
webster
flask
appendage
origin
latin
from
greek
askidion
little
define
əˈsɪd
show
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mycology
baglike
pitcherlike
askídion
small
wiktionary
zoology
former
genus
simple
ascidians
which
formerly
included
most
known
species
sometimes
used
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əˈsɪdɪəm
pronunciation
noun
plural
cidia
ˈsɪdɪə
defined
yourdictionary
structure
bladderwort
modern
classical
diminutive
10 LIVRES EN ANGLAIS EN RAPPORT AVEC «ASCIDIUM»
Découvrez l'usage de
ascidium dans la sélection bibliographique suivante. Des livres en rapport avec
ascidium et de courts extraits de ceux-ci pour replacer dans son contexte son utilisation littéraire.
TJREDINEiE. 1. iEcidium abundans Pk. Symphoricarpus occidentalis. Nebraska.
2. .fficidium apocyni Schw. Apocymim cannabinum. Virginia. 3. aScidium
clematidis DC. a. Clamatis ligusticifolia. Nebraska. b. Clematis virginiana.
Missouri. 4.
United States. Bureau of Plant Industry, 1902
2
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia: A Work of Universal ...
I, (1. Of or belonging to the Ascidia or Tunioata. II. "sea-squirt. ascidiarium (a-sid-
i-a'ri-um), 11.; p1. ascidiaria (4;). [N L., ( Ascidium + -an'um.] Acompound ascidian
, consisting of two or more individual ascidiozooids. Sec out under cyathozoiiid.
William Dwight Whitney, 1904
See cuts under Ap- pendicularia, Doliofido?. Salpa, and Tunicata. 2. [Used as a
singular.] Less proper form of Ascidium. — 3. [I. c] Plural of ascidium, 2.
Ascidiacea (a-sid-i-a/se-a), n. pi. [NL., < Ascidium + -rt„'a.] Same as Ascidioida, 2.
Ascidiae ...
Stomata, corresponding in structure with those of Ficus bengalensis, with which
they were compared, were abundant on the internal surface of the ascidium, but
absent on the external surface, which contains the palisade tissue. Furthermore ...
John Merle Coulter, M.S. Coulter, Charles Reid Barnes, 1903
5
The collected works of Sir Humphry Davy ...: Discourses ...
Stomata, corresponding in structure with those of Ficus bengalensis, with which
they were compared, were abundant on the internal surface of the ascidium, but
absent on the external surface, which contains the palisade tissue. Furthermore ...
John Merle Coulter, Sir Humphry Davy, John Davy, 1903
A. Ascidia erecta; flores flavi vel albido-flavi. a. Asclalium ore poslice albido-
maculatum; operculum valde concavum; flores lutci . . . . . . . . . . b. Ascidium ore
postice vlride, in venis vel omnino rubropurpureum; operculum suberectum ad
ereclum ...
7
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia: The Century ...
( Ascidium + -an.] I. a. Of or belonging to the Ascidia or Tunicata. II, n. sea-squirt.
aacidiarium (a-sid-i-5/ri-um), 21.; pl. ascidfaria (-§i_.). [N L., ( Ascidium + -a.ri'um.]
Acompound ascidian, consisting of two or more individual ascidiozooids. See out
...
William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin Eli Smith, 1911
8
Annals of Natural History
of the blade of the leaf. The leaf coheres by its margins a:nd above, absolutely as
in the formation of carpels, which made me say that the ascidium is a tendency to
the floral form. Since this period new facts have confirmed this theory. During ...
9
Annals of Natural History, Or Magazine of Zoology, Botany, ...
of the blade of the leaf. The leaf coheres by its margins and above, absolutely as
in the formation of carpels, which made me say that the ascidium is a tendency to
the floral form. Since this period new facts have confirmed this theory. During ...
Formation of ascidium: — The transition from the terminal single leaf to the
ascidium that invariably terminates the axis is very gradual. Terminal leaf with a
slight basal pouch forms the first stage (Fig. 1, D). This pouch gradually develops
into a ...