Definition of Suberose

1. a. Having a corky texture.

Definition of Suberose

1. corky [adj] - See also: corky

Lexicographical Neighbors of Suberose

suberic acid
suberin
suberins
suberise
suberised
suberises
suberising
suberization
suberizations
suberize
suberized
suberizes
suberizing
suberone
suberones
suberose (current term)
suberous
suberoyl
suberoylanilide
subers
subesophageal
subessive
subessive case
subexponential
subexpression
subexpressions
subfactor
subfamilies
subfamily
subfamily Acoraceae

Literary usage of Suberose

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

1. Annals and Magazine of Natural History by William Jardine (1855)
"In the suberose variety of the Elm, the first development of the lenticels takes place as in the Elder, but the excessive hypertrophy of the ..."

2. Cellulose: An Outline of the Chemistry of the Structural Elements of Plants by Charles Frederick Cross, Edward John Bevan, Clayton Beadle (1895)
"... upon suberin (or suberose), which yielded similar products of saponification. He there fore concluded that the two products are substantially identical. ..."

3. The Monthly Microscopical Journal: Transactions of the Royal Microscopical (1870)
"... provided with a sclerenchyma of a suberose consistence, disposed after the ... entirely flexible, and is either of the consistence of horn or suberose. ..."

4. The Popular Science Monthly (1884)
"... which have been formed under water; that the matter remaining as coal consists almost entirely of epidermal tissues, which, being suberose in character, ..."

5. The Popular Science Monthly by Harry Houdini Collection (Library of Congress) (1884)
"... that the matter remaining as coal consists almost entirely of epidermal tissues, which, being suberose in character, are highly carbonaceous, ..."

6. Proceedings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1883)
"... that the matter remaining as coal consists almost entirely of epidermal tissues, which being suberose in character are highly carbonaceous, very durable ..."

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