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plagiostome

plagiostome, n. (a.)
  (ˈpleɪdʒɪəʊstəʊm)
  [a. F. plagiostome, f. plagio- + Gr. στόµα mouth.]
  A member of the Plagiostomi, cartilaginous fishes, including the sharks and rays, which have the mouth placed transversely beneath the snout.

1842 Brande Dict. Sc. etc., Plagiostomes, a tribe of Cartilaginous fishes. 1859 Owen in Encycl. Brit. (ed. 8) XVII. 117/2 Affinities with the Cestracion amongst existing Plagiostomes. 1860 Couch Brit. Fishes I. 5 [The Sharks and] their kindred chondropterygians or plagiostomes—the Rays. 1881 Günther in Encycl. Brit. XII. 667/1 No detached undoubted tooth of a Plagiostome..has been discovered in the Ludlow deposits.

  b. attrib. or adj. Plagiostomous.

1835 R. Willis in Todd's Cycl. Anat. I. 115/1 The cartilaginous plagiostome fishes.

  So plagioˈstomatous (rare), plagiˈostomous adjs., of or pertaining to the plagiostomes; having the mouth situated transversely beneath the snout.

1858 Mayne Expos. Lex., Plagiostomus,..plagiostomous. 1859 Owen in Encycl. Brit. (ed. 8) XVII. 116/1 A genus of plagiostomous cartilaginous fishes called Onchus. 1881 Seeley in Cassell's Nat. Hist. V. 38 The Rays form the second division of the Plagiostomous fishes. 1890 Cent. Dict., Plagiostomatous.

Oxford English Dictionary

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