¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Baglike
1. resembling a bag [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Baglike
Literary usage of Baglike
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Phycologia Australica; or, A history of Australian seaweeds by William Henry Harvey (1863)
"The difference in habit is not so great as appears ; for though Gl. Brownii (Tab.
LXXXIII.) is most usually quite simple and baglike, yet it sometimes ..."
2. The Cambridge Natural History by Sidney Frederick Harmer, Arthur Everett Shipley (1899)
"The larvae of other forms have the habit of forming dense webs, more or less
baglike, for common habitation by a great number of caterpillars, ..."
3. The House and Home: A Practical Book by Lyman Abbott (1896)
"... glaring velvet carpet, tufted satin chairs, alabaster ornaments, and bulky
picture- frames ; they observed the baglike appearance of the gowns which the ..."
4. Bulletin by United States Bureau of Plant Industry, Division of Plant Industry, Queensland (1907)
"... showing plant with its broad, parallel-veined leaves, and curious, baglike
flower, and also rootstock with wavy roots. Fig. -. ..."
5. The Journal of Anatomy and Physiology by Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland (1879)
"... cinereus,—the peritoneal papillae were swollen and baglike, but injection
failed to demonstrate the existence of any pores by which their cavities could ..."
6. Applied Physiology: Including the Effects of Alcohol and Narcotics by Frank Overton (1897)
"At irregular intervals the lymphatics open into small, baglike bodies composed
of a spongy network of fibers filled with cells which look like white blood ..."
7. The Diagnostics of internal medicine: A Clinical Treatise Upon the by Glentworth Reeve Butler (1906)
"A pale, puffy face, with baglike swellings beneath the eyes, is seen in those
diseases of the kidney which are ..."