Definition of Meshworks

1. Noun. (plural of meshwork) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Meshworks

1. meshwork [n] - See also: meshwork

Lexicographical Neighbors of Meshworks

meshugaas
meshugah
meshugenah
meshugenahs
meshugeneh
meshugenehs
meshugga
meshuggah
meshugge
meshuggeneh
meshuggener
meshuggeners
meshweb weaver
meshweb weavers
meshwork
meshworks (current term)
meshy
mesiad
mesial
mesial caries
mesial displacement
mesial occlusion
mesial plane
mesial surface of tooth
mesially
mesian
mesic
mesically
mesidine

Literary usage of Meshworks

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

1. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1894)
"Very often there is complete filling of several adjacent capillary meshworks. Most of the pigment shows no trace of parasite (probably the effect of ..."

2. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia for by American Philosophical Society (1919)
"well as in the protoplast, must be considered as simply mixed in an intimate manner in interlocking meshworks, foams or whatever interpretations may be ..."

3. A Text Book of Physiology by Michael Foster (1891)
"... in loose connective tissue, in irregular meshworks) with which are associated in varying abundance anastomosing curled yellow elastic fibres, ..."

4. A Text Book of Physiology by Michael Foster (1893)
"... in loose connective tissue, in irregular meshworks) with which are associated in varying abundance anastomosing curled yellow elastic fibres, ..."

5. Journal of the Royal Microscopical Society by Royal Microscopical Society, London (1882)
"Soon, too, the aboral process begins to form meshworks. This mode of growth not only takes place laterally but also mesially, so that the ends of the ..."

6. A Text-book of Bacteriology: A Practical Treatise for Students and by Philip Hanson Hiss, Hans Zinsser (1918)
"These forms, like the preceding, form delicate mycelial meshworks from which branches or conidiophores about 3-10 mm. in length, arise. ..."

7. The Indian Policy of the United States on the Southwestern Frontier, 1830 by Joseph Abner Hill, Philip Hanson Hiss, Hans Zinsser (1914)
"These forms, like the preceding, form delicate mycelial meshworks from which branches or conidiophores about 3-1(1 mm. in length,arise. ..."

8. A Manual of Pathological Anatomy by Karl Rokitansky (1854)
"This establishes the distinction between the alveolar textural arrangement and many similar, but differently engendered, meshworks, cavernous structures and ..."

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