¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Idioblasts
1. idioblast [n] - See also: idioblast
Lexicographical Neighbors of Idioblasts
Literary usage of Idioblasts
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Manual of the North American Gymnosperms: Exclusive of the Cycadales But by David Pearce Penhallow (1907)
"... idioblasts The investigations of Eichler (15, 35) show that in Gingko the wood
is characterized by the presence of wood-parenchyma cells, which take the ..."
2. Systematic Anatomy of the Dicotyledons: A Handbook for Laboratories of Pure by Hans Solereder (1908)
"Large crystal-idioblasts, which for the most part have a suberized wall, and are
occupied by clustered or solitary crystals, are equally common in the ..."
3. Botanical Gazette by University of Chicago, JSTOR (Organization) (1906)
"The first is characterized by the presence of idioblasts which contain ...
The idioblasts of the second suborder occur in the vascular tissue and differ ..."
4. Applied and Economic Botany: Especially Adapted for the Use of Students in by Henry Kraemer (1914)
"idioblasts containing tannin and anthocyanin: AD. idioblasts in primary ...
F to H, idioblasts in Parnassia palustris: F, portion of epidermis of leaf ..."
5. Applied and Economic Botany for Students in Technical and Agricultural by Henry Kraemer (1916)
"idioblasts containing tannin and anthocyanin: AD, idioblasts in primary ...
F to H, idioblasts in Parnassia palustris; F, portion of epidermis of leaf ..."
6. The Cell; Outlines of General Anatomy and Physiology: Outlines of General by Oscar Hertwig, Henry Johnstone Campbell (1895)
"We have, therefore, to distinguish between two modes of multiplication of the
idioblasts; the one referring to all of them, which results in nuclear ..."
7. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia for by American Philosophical Society (1917)
"The most of the idioblasts in this organ, as well as those in stem and roots,
... The idioblasts of the leaves, however, are more irregular and branched or ..."