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caulome
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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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phyllome
phyllome Bot. (ˈfɪləʊm) [ad. mod.L. phyllōma, f. Gr. ϕύλλωµα foliage, clothing of leaves, f. ϕυλλοῦν to clothe with leaves, f. ϕύλλον leaf. (But -ome has here rather the mod. sense of ‘formation’ as in caulome, rhizome.) So in mod.F.] 1. The general name for a leaf or any organ homologous with a lea...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Botany
Modern morphology recognises a continuum between the major morphological categories of root, stem (caulome), leaf (phyllome) and trichome.
wikipedia.org
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tracheome
tracheome Bot. rare. (ˈtreɪkiːəʊm) [f. trachea + -ome as in rhizome, caulome, etc.] General term for a wood-vessel (trachea), wood-cell (tracheide), or other structure of the same class.1900 B. D. Jackson Gloss. Bot. Terms 273/1 Tracheome, stated by Potonié not to be the tracheal, but the hydral sys...
Oxford English Dictionary
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-ome
-ome anglicized form of -oma (partly through influence of G. -om, F. -ome), occurring chiefly in Bot. in terms such as caulome, hadrome, phyllome, rhizome, and usu. signifying a structure or group of cells forming a normal part of the anatomy, in contrast with the abnormality implied by -oma (cf. my...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Plant morphology
This leads to a continuum morphology that demonstrates a continuum between the morphological categories of root, shoot, stem (caulome), leaf (phyllome)
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
trichome
trichome (ˈtrɪ-, ˈtraɪkəʊm) [ad. Gr. τρίχωµα (see trichoma); cf. caulome.] 1. Bot. The general name for any outgrowth of the epidermis or superficial tissue of a plant, as hairs, scales, prickles, etc.1875 Bennett & Dyer tr. Sachs' Bot. 129 We may term all appendages of other parts which originate a...
Oxford English Dictionary
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