cœlomic

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cœlomic
cœlomic, a. (siːˈlɒmɪk) [f. cœlome + -ic.] Pertaining to, or of the nature of, a cœlome.1881 A. M. Marshall in Jrnl. Microsc. Sc. Jan. 73 The separation of the layers of the mesoblast so as to give rise to a cœlomic cavity. 1885 Athenæum 11 Apr. 474/2 The shell glands of the phyllopods..have no cœlo... Oxford English Dictionary
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cœlomatic
cœlomatic, a. (siːləʊˈmætɪk) [f. Gr. κοιλωµατ- stem of κοίλωµα (see cœlome) + -ic.] Pertaining to a cœlome; = cœlomic.1878 Bell Gegenbauer's Anat. 216 The two cœlomatic tubes nipped off from the enteron gradually increase in size. Oxford English Dictionary
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Seydou Doumbia
He joined second division team Toumodi on loan for the 2004–05 season, and was on loan in 2005 at AS Denguélé, where he became Côte d'Ivoire Premier Division In their Moscow derby against Dinamo on 8 May, Doumbia seemingly won the game with a strike in the 81st minute, until a defensive error let Marko Lomic wikipedia.org
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cœlomo-
cœlomo- (siːˈləʊməʊ) used as combining form of Gr. κοίλωµα cœlome, as in cœˈlomoduct [duct n. 6], cœˈlomostome [Gr. στόµα mouth] (see quots.).1900 E. R. Lankester Treat. Zool. II. ii. 13 These apertures are..formed..by an outward, often tube-like growth of the cœlom itself... I propose to call them ... Oxford English Dictionary
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Ceiba State Forest
Geography Climate The average annual precipitation in the reserve is 1,312 mm of rain per year, and its average temperatures are of 26.1C. There are two other types of soil found in the reserve: lomic sandy soil found in the beach areas, and the loamy clay silt found throughout the parts of wikipedia.org
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metacœlome
metacœlome Biol. (mɛtəˈsiːləʊm) Also -om. [f. meta- + cœlome.] (See quot.)1888 Rolleston & Jackson Anim. Life 223 Nephridial funnels appear to be present in all Leeches... They are perforate in Nephelis and Trochaeta, and in these genera they open into special spaces developed in the botryoidal tiss... Oxford English Dictionary
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hypotonic
hypotonic, a. (haɪpəˈtɒnɪk) [f. hypo- 4 + tonic a.] 1. a. Physiol. Of a solution: having a lower osmotic pressure than some particular solution (usually that in a cell, or a bodily fluid). Const. to.1895 Jrnl. Physiol. XVIII. 114 The passage of a salt from a hypotonic fluid into the blood-plasma. 19... Oxford English Dictionary
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caulome
caulome Bot. (ˈkɔːləʊm) [f. Gr. καυλός stem, after rhizome, Gr. ῥίζωµα (f. ῥιζό-ειν to strike root); see -ome. Also in Græco-Latin form cauloma.] The general name for the leaf-bearing axis of a plant; a stem or branch, or any member morphologically corresponding to these.1875 Bennett & Dyer Sachs' B... Oxford English Dictionary
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amœbocyte
amœbocyte Zool. (əˈmiːbəsaɪt) [Fr. (L. Cuénot, 1888), f. amœba + -o + -cyte.] A cell having amœboid shape or properties; esp. a type of corpuscle in the cœlomic fluid of certain echinoderms, etc.1892 Q. Jrnl. Microsc. Sci. XXXIII. 111 Cuénot..advances a theory that certain granules contained in ‘ami... Oxford English Dictionary
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gono-
gono- (ˈgɒnəʊ) prefix, before a vowel gon-, repr. Gr. γονο-, comb. form of γόνος, γονή generation, offspring, semen, etc. Used in a few compounds in Greek (of which only gonorrhœa has passed into English), and now employed in various technical terms of modern Biology, Zoology, etc. ˈgonoblast Biol. ... Oxford English Dictionary
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entero-
entero- (ˈɛntərəʊ; before two unstressed syllables ɛntəˈrɒ) (before a vowel sometimes reduced to enter-), combining form of Gr. ἔντερο-ν intestine, in many compounds of mod. formation, occurring in Biology, Pathology, etc. The most important only are here given; as enteradeˈnography Anat. [see adeno... Oxford English Dictionary
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myo-
myo- (ˈmaɪəʊ) combining f. Gr. µῦς (gen. µυό-ς) muscle, in many scientific terms (of which the most important will be found as Main words). ˈmyoblast [-blast], a cell which gives rise to muscular elements; hence myoˈblastic a. (in recent Dicts.); myoˈchemistry, the chemistry of muscle; ‖ ˈmyochrome ... Oxford English Dictionary
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intra-
intra-, prefix (ɪntrə) repr. L. intrā ‘on the inside, within’, used in numerous recent formations, chiefly adjectival. This use of intra- does not occur in classical L., and only a few examples appear in late and med.L. But it is largely used in modern times, esp. in biological terms, where it is of... Oxford English Dictionary
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peri-
peri-, prefix repr. Gr. περί prep. and adv., ‘round, around, round about, about’, combined in these senses with verbs and their derivatives, substantives and adjectives; (a) in adverbial construction, as περιβλέπειν to look around, περιστρέϕειν to turn round, περίοδος a going round, περίπατος walkin... Oxford English Dictionary
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proto-
proto- (prəʊtəʊ) before a vowel or h properly prot- (prəʊt), or with h (prəʊθ), repr. Gr. πρωτο-, combining form of πρῶτος first, which became πρωτ- before a simple, and πρωθ- before an aspirated vowel. In compounds already used in Greek, and many of later formation, the Greek practice (represented ... Oxford English Dictionary
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