¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Stomodeal
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Stomodeal
Literary usage of Stomodeal
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Early Embryology of the Chick by Bradley Merrill Patten (1920)
"Opposite this out-pocketing of the pharynx, and growing in to meet it, the
stomodeal depression is formed. The thin membrane formed by the meeting of the ..."
2. A Text-book of Entomology: Including the Anatomy, Physiology, Embryology and by Alpheus Spring Packard (1898)
"At the two ends the endodermal rudiment fuses with the stomodeal and ...
become separated as endodermal rudiments through the advance of the stomodeal and ..."
3. The American Naturalist by American Society of Naturalists, Essex Institute (1902)
"On page 332 there is an erroneous conception of the pharynx, no portion of which
is stomodeal; the idea of a gono- tome (p. 343) has been vigorously ..."
4. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (1908)
"The mouth is formed at the very place where the blastopore closes, and the
oesophagus is formed by the elongation of the stomodeal invagination (fig. ..."
5. Outlines of Comparative Anatomy of Vertebrates by John Sterling Kingsley (1917)
"THE ORAL CAVITY The cavity of the mouth is limited anteriorly by the line of the
stomodeal involution and extends back to the pharynx. ..."
6. Outlines of Comparative Anatomy of Vertebrates by John Sterling Kingsley (1917)
"... n, nervous system; nc, notochord; s, stomodeal region; sh, sclerotome. (In
many vertebrates the sclerotome extends upward to the lower part of m. ..."
7. Outlines of Comparative Anatomy of Vertebrates by John Sterling Kingsley (1917)
"(In some the stomodeal ingrowth IS at first end of an amphibian embryo, showing
the j , . . FIG. 7. ..."