¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Arborizations
1. arborization [n] - See also: arborization
Lexicographical Neighbors of Arborizations
Literary usage of Arborizations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal, Exhibiting a View of the Progressive by Robert Jameson, Sir William Jardine, Henry D Rogers (1828)
"The arborizations, as already mentioned, are black, brown, or green. ...
These arborizations appear in some cases to be owing to iron, ..."
2. The Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal (1828)
"The arborizations, as already mentioned, are black, brown, or green. ...
These arborizations appear in some cases to be owing to iron, ..."
3. Text-book of Anatomy and Physiology for Nurses by Diana Clifford Kimber, Carolyn Elizabeth Gray (1918)
"Nerve-fibres which terminate in the brain or spinal cord split up into end
arborizations. End arborizations. — If the nerve-fibre is to terminate while ..."
4. Annual of the Universal Medical Sciencesedited by [Anonymus AC02809657] edited by [Anonymus AC02809657] (1894)
"a considerable number of terminal nerve arborizations of nerve-fibrils without
myeline occur. In these animals the protoplasmic expansions of the cellules ..."
5. A Treatise on nervous and mental diseases by Landon Carter Gray (1895)
"... at right-angles, fine horizontal collaterals that proceed to the motor cells
of the anterior horn, surrounding them with arborizations. ..."
6. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease by American Neurological Association, Philadelphia Neurological Society, Chicago Neurological Society, New York Neurological Association, Boston Society of Psychiatry and Neurology (1920)
"areas and of the terminal arborizations of the axones of sensori- motor cells
... In addition, there come into these areas the terminal arborizations of the ..."
7. The Integrative Action of the Nervous System by Charles Scott Sherrington (1906)
"The simile fails, because in the nervous forest the arborizations make functional
union one with another. Is the fusion of the perceptions adjunct to paired ..."