¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Radicles
1. radicle [n] - See also: radicle
Lexicographical Neighbors of Radicles
Literary usage of Radicles
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Mineralogy: An Introduction to the Scientific Study of Minerals by Henry Alexander Miers (1902)
"Classification of Minerals by Acid radicles. ... Haloid compounds in which metallic
elements or radicles are combined with the haloid elements, fluorine, ..."
2. A Dictionary of Chemistry and the Allied Branches of Other Sciences by Henry Watts (1870)
"The radicles which, when they replace half the hydrogen in a molecule of water
form alcohols, are capable of uniting, though not directly, with chlorine ..."
3. Report of the Annual Meeting (1856)
"When, however, the same experiments were repeated in a north aspect, the same
law did not hold good, for out of 69 seeds,— 52 radicles and 22 ..."
4. A Text-book of Organic Chemistry by August Bernthsen (1891)
"radicles. According to Liebig, radicles were groups of atoms capable of a separate
... Later on, the postulate that such radicles must also be capable of ..."
5. The Power of Movement in Plants by Charles Darwin, Francis Darwin (1900)
"Manner in which radicles bend when they encounter an obstacle in the soil—Vicia
faba, tips of radicles highly sensitive to contact and other ..."
6. Elements of Chemistry: Theoretical and Practical by William Allen Miller (1867)
"(1061) Theory of Isolated radicles—Atoms and Molecules.— The recent progress of
research has rendered it very probable that the bodies thus isolated are not ..."