˜yÐÄvlog

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phyllodium

[ fi-loh-dee-uhm ]

noun

plural phyllodia


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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of phyllodium1

1840–50; < New Latin, equivalent to Greek ±è³ó²â±ô±ôṓd ( ŧ²õ ) leaflike ( phyllode ) + New Latin -ium -ium
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Phyllodium, fi-lÅ′di-um, n. a petiole which usurps the function of a leaf-blade.—adj.

From

Martins proposes to apply the word 'cladodium' to such expansions, just as the term phyllodium is applied to the similar dilatation of the leaf-stalks.

From

Cassia phyllodinea is one of the very few species of the genus, which, like the far greater part of New Holland Acaciae lose their compound leaves, and are reduced to the footstalk, or phyllodium, as it is then called, and which generally becomes foliaceous by vertical compression and dilatation.

From

To this species may perhaps be referred Cassia linearis of Cunningham MS., discovered by him in 1817, but which appears to differ in having a single prominent gland about the middle of its phyllodium: Bentham's plant being entirely eglandular.

From

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