Definition of Energids

1. energid [n] - See also: energid

Lexicographical Neighbors of Energids

enemata
enemator
enemie
enemies
enemy
enemy combatant
enemy combatants
enepidermic
energetic
energetical
energetically
energetick
energetics
energic
energid
energids (current term)
energies
energise
energised
energiser
energisers
energises
energising
energization
energizations
energize
energized
energizer
energizers
energizes

Literary usage of Energids

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Organography of Plants, Especially of the Archegoniata and Spermaphyta by Karl Goebel (1900)
"COLONIES OF energids INVESTED BY A MEMBRANE. A few examples only which are instructive in connexion with general questions of organography will be cited ..."

2. Microbiology: A Text-book of Microörganisms, General and Applied by Charles E. Marshall (1921)
"... CYTOLOGY CELLS AND energids The microorganisms are confined to cells, such as algae, ... the union of several energids in the same anatomical unit (Fig. ..."

3. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1900)
"Thus in the higher plants the protoplasm is segmented or septated by walls into uninucleate units or ' energids ' (Sachs), and such plants are well ..."

4. Report of the Annual Meeting (1901)
"According to their position in the organism the energids become devoted to the ... There the energids of the cambium, which normally produce the permanent ..."

5. The Causes and Course of Organic Evolution: A Study of Bioenergics by John Muirhead Macfarlane (1918)
"If an excess number of such energids be distributed during chromatin and cell-division to certain cells, say those of the root, that we would then call ..."

6. A Student's Text-book of Botany by Sydney Howard Vines (1896)
"is not a single cell, but is an aggregate of protoplasmic units (energids) enclosed within a common wall. Such a body, or part of a body, ..."

7. The American Naturalist by American Society of Naturalists, Essex Institute (1904)
"... that they stand for the cooperative union of many hundreds of zoospores (energids) represented by the nuclei and their respective pairs of cilia. ..."

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