Definition of Exopods

1. Noun. (plural of exopod) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Exopods

1. exopod [n] - See also: exopod

Lexicographical Neighbors of Exopods

exophyllous
exophyte
exophytes
exophytic
exoplanar
exoplanet
exoplanetary
exoplanetology
exoplanets
exoplasm
exoplasms
exopod
exopoda
exopodite
exopodites
exopods (current term)
exopolitics
exopolyphosphatase
exopolyphosphatases
exopolysaccharide
exopolysaccharides
exoproducts
exoprotease
exoprotein
exoproteolytic
exoptable
exoptile
exorable
exorbitance
exorbitances

Literary usage of Exopods

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

1. A History of Crustacea: Recent Malacostraca by Thomas Roscoe Rede Stebbing (1893)
"One or both of the pairs have usually small two-jointed exopods. ... The small exopods above mentioned, when seen only in cabinet specimens, ..."

2. The Amphibians of Western North America by Joseph Richard Slevin (1900)
"chelate and furnished with small exopods and increasing in length posteriorly. No pod obra n oh i se. All the abdominal appendages bear two foliaceous ..."

3. A Monograph on the Isopods of North America by Harriet Richardson (1905)
"Second pair of antenna; with a scale articulated to the end of the second article. Head and first thoracic segment coalesced. 6. exopods present on both ..."

4. The Reptiles of the Pacific Coast and Great Basin: An Account of the Species by John Van Denburgh (1897)
"They approach more nearly X. compressa (De Haan), for in that species supraorbital spines are present, though there are exopods on all the ..."

5. The American Naturalist by American Society of Naturalists, Essex Institute (1904)
"and here are held in position by the exopods of the swimmerets while the ... The hairs of the exopods are plumose or serrate, a condition which prevents ..."

6. Transactions of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences by Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences (1882)
"... and together about equal to the length of the carpus, which is very slightly longer than the merus. The rudimentary exopods of the third and fourth ..."

7. Bulletin by Smithsonian Institution, Dept. of the Interior, United States Dept. of the Interior, United States National Museum, United States (1905)
"... with a scale articulated to the end of the second article. Head and first thoracic segment coalesced. b. exopods present on both pairs? of ..."

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