|
Definition of Energid
1. Noun. A biological unit consisting of a nucleus and the body of cytoplasm with which it interacts.
Definition of Energid
1. a nucleus and the body of cytoplasm with which it interacts [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Energid
Literary usage of Energid
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)
"An energid-colony can construct larger fructifications which are better adapted
for the distribution of the spores. It is especially instructive to note ..."
2. The Cell in Development and Inheritance by Edmund Beecher Wilson (1911)
"Sachs sharply distinguishes between the energid (nucleus ... and the passive
energid-products, placing in the former the nucleus, nucleolus, ..."
3. The Physiology of Plants: A Treatise Upon the Metabolism and Sources of by Wilhelm Pfeffer (1900)
"Since the terms cell and protoplast definitely indicate the combination of nucleus
and cytoplasm, it seems hardly necessary to introduce the term energid to ..."
4. Biological Lectures Delivered at the Marine Biological Laboratory of Wood's (1894)
"From the genetic standpoint, as given in the present paper, this single energid
is already a complex of at least two kinds of organisms, different in their ..."
5. Journal of Applied Microscopy by Bausch & Lomb Optical Company (1901)
"Noll takes exception to the definition of " energid " as given by Sachs, ...
He therefore defines the energid as a " one or many nucleate plasmatic body ..."
6. Journal of Botany, British and Foreign (1898)
"energid invades a cell, forces the nucleus of that cell to retire, draws to itself
the protoplasm of the host-cell, and finally subdivides to form new cells ..."
7. A University Text-book of Botany by Douglas Houghton Campbell (1907)
"The name " energid ... unit of organisms, an energid being defined as a single
nucleus with the surrounding cytoplasm which is under its influence. ..."
8. Organography of Plants, Especially of the Archegoniata and Spermaphyta by Karl Goebel (1900)
"An energid-colony can construct larger fructifications which are better adapted
for the distribution of the spores. It is especially instructive to note ..."
9. The Cell in Development and Inheritance by Edmund Beecher Wilson (1911)
"Sachs sharply distinguishes between the energid (nucleus ... and the passive
energid-products, placing in the former the nucleus, nucleolus, ..."
10. The Physiology of Plants: A Treatise Upon the Metabolism and Sources of by Wilhelm Pfeffer (1900)
"Since the terms cell and protoplast definitely indicate the combination of nucleus
and cytoplasm, it seems hardly necessary to introduce the term energid to ..."
11. Biological Lectures Delivered at the Marine Biological Laboratory of Wood's (1894)
"From the genetic standpoint, as given in the present paper, this single energid
is already a complex of at least two kinds of organisms, different in their ..."
12. Journal of Applied Microscopy by Bausch & Lomb Optical Company (1901)
"Noll takes exception to the definition of " energid " as given by Sachs, ...
He therefore defines the energid as a " one or many nucleate plasmatic body ..."
13. Journal of Botany, British and Foreign (1898)
"energid invades a cell, forces the nucleus of that cell to retire, draws to itself
the protoplasm of the host-cell, and finally subdivides to form new cells ..."
14. A University Text-book of Botany by Douglas Houghton Campbell (1907)
"The name " energid ... unit of organisms, an energid being defined as a single
nucleus with the surrounding cytoplasm which is under its influence. ..."