Artificial intelligent assistant

tubule

tubule
  (ˈtjuːbjuːl)
  [ad. L. tubul-us, dim. of tubus tube; cf. F. tubule (Cotgr.).]
  A small tube; a minute tubular structure in an animal or plant body, as the Malpighian or uriniferous tubules of the kidney, the dentinal tubules of the teeth, etc.

1677 tr. Groeneveldt's Treat. Stone 19 The stone growing in the tubule or pelvis of the kidney. 1699 J. Woodward in Phil. Trans. XXI. 211 Reduced to single Corpuscles, all fit to enter the Tubules and Vessels of Plants. 1867 J. Hogg Microsc. ii. i. 333 Contrivances to enable the tubules of the woody tissues to discharge their contents. 1869 Huxley Phys. xii. 322 The chief constituent of a tooth is dentine... It presents innumerable, minute, parallel, wavy tubules... The wider ends of these tubules open into the pulp cavity.

  Hence ˈtubulet [-et1], a minute tubule.

1826 Kirby & Sp. Entomol. III. xxxiii. 363 Tubulus (the Tubulet), The tube or retractile base of the Rostellum. Siphunculus (the Siphuncle), the real instrument of suction, which when unemployed is retracted within the tubulet.

Oxford English Dictionary

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