¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Tracheas
1. trachea [n] - See also: trachea
Lexicographical Neighbors of Tracheas
Literary usage of Tracheas
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Journal of Comparative Pathology and Therapeutics (1888)
"RESULTS Antibiotic and Glycerol Broth as Suspending Media for tracheas After
storage of the carcases, ILT virus was isolated from 25 of the 27 tracheas ..."
2. Chambers's Information for the People by William Chambers, Robert Chambers (1875)
"tracheas may also be present. But by far the most remarkable organs are the
spinnerets, by means of which these animals spin their curious and beautiful ..."
3. Text-book of Human Physiology: Including Histology and Microscopical Anatomy by Leonard Landois, Albert Philson Brubaker (1905)
"The stigmata on the outer surface of the body, constituting the entrances to the
tracheas, are provided with peculiar contrivances for closing, ..."
4. The Annals of Philosophy by Richard Phillips, E W Brayley (1815)
"The pulmonary tracheas extend in a straight line from one extremity of the body
... The arterial tracheas continuing in the thorax and abdomen by two common ..."
5. Report of the Henry Phipps Institute by University of Pennsylvania, Henry Phipps Institute (1915)
"Any one who has listened over a considerable number of tracheas (a performance,
by the way, that is very instructive) must be impressed with the wide ..."
6. The Basal Connections of the Tracheae of the Wings of Insects by Royal Norton Chapman (1918)
"The anterior and posterior stems of the leg tracheae (as and ps) have attained
an almost horizontal position, giving the leg tracheas a T-shape. ..."