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Definition of Symbiote
1. Noun. an organism in a partnership with another such that each profits from their being together; a symbiont ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Symbiote
1. symbiont [n -S] - See also: symbiont
Lexicographical Neighbors of Symbiote
Literary usage of Symbiote
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"... der symbiote, 1879), but the relations expressed by it were first brought into
general notice by the epoch-marking discovery of the dual nature of the ..."
2. Principles of Animal Biology by Aaron Franklin Shull, George Roger Larue, Alexander Grant Ruthven (1920)
"symbiote (sim'biote). An animal which lives in a symbiotic relationship with
another species; called also symbiont. Symbiotic (sim' bi ot ' ik). ..."
3. Report of the Annual Meeting (1896)
"... has here a distinct physiological value to the orchid, and is not a merely
tolerated symbiote. 6. Attempts to discover whether the mycelium forming the ..."
4. Bacteriology: General, Pathological and Intestinal by Arthur Isaac Kendall (1921)
"... finally by the method of development from a single cell, to be certain that
an admixture with B. sporogenes or other anaerobic symbiote is prevented. ..."
5. Parasites: A Treatise on the Entozoa of Man and Animals Including Some by Thomas Spencer Cobbold (1879)
"... full bibliography and numerous beautiful plates ; see also Review in the '
Veterinarian/ Aug., 1877, p. 563). — Idem, " Memoire ear un nouveau symbiote ..."
6. Transactions of the Pathological Society of London by Pathological Society of London (1900)
"... sure evidence of it having forced its way between the mantle and shell of its
symbiote, when it is no longer treated as a guest, but as a foreign body. ..."
7. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"... der symbiote, 1879), but the relations expressed by it were first brought into
general notice by the epoch-marking discovery of the dual nature of the ..."
8. Principles of Animal Biology by Aaron Franklin Shull, George Roger Larue, Alexander Grant Ruthven (1920)
"symbiote (sim'biote). An animal which lives in a symbiotic relationship with
another species; called also symbiont. Symbiotic (sim' bi ot ' ik). ..."
9. Report of the Annual Meeting (1896)
"... has here a distinct physiological value to the orchid, and is not a merely
tolerated symbiote. 6. Attempts to discover whether the mycelium forming the ..."
10. Bacteriology: General, Pathological and Intestinal by Arthur Isaac Kendall (1921)
"... finally by the method of development from a single cell, to be certain that
an admixture with B. sporogenes or other anaerobic symbiote is prevented. ..."
11. Parasites: A Treatise on the Entozoa of Man and Animals Including Some by Thomas Spencer Cobbold (1879)
"... full bibliography and numerous beautiful plates ; see also Review in the '
Veterinarian/ Aug., 1877, p. 563). — Idem, " Memoire ear un nouveau symbiote ..."
12. Transactions of the Pathological Society of London by Pathological Society of London (1900)
"... sure evidence of it having forced its way between the mantle and shell of its
symbiote, when it is no longer treated as a guest, but as a foreign body. ..."