Word Meanings - ISOSPORE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
One of the spores produced by an isosporous organism. A zygospore.
Related words: (words related to ISOSPORE)
- PRODUCIBILITY
The quality or state of being producible. Barrow. - PRODUCEMENT
Production. - PRODUCTIVITY
The quality or state of being productive; productiveness. Emerson. Not indeed as the product, but as the producing power, the productivity. Coleridge. - PRODUCTUS
An extinct genus of brachiopods, very characteristic of the Carboniferous rocks. - PRODUCTILE
Capable of being extended or prolonged; extensible; ductile. - PRODUCER
A furnace for producing combustible gas which is used for fuel. (more info) 1. One who produces, brings forth, or generates. 2. One who grows agricultural products, or manufactures crude materials into articles of use. - PRODUCENT
One who produces, or offers to notice. Ayliffe. - ISOSPOROUS
Producing but one kind of spore, as the ferns. - PRODUCTRESS
A female producer. - PRODUCER'S SURPLUS; PRODUCER'S RENT
Any profit above the normal rate of interest and wages accruing to a producer on account of some monopoly of the means or materials of production; -- called also Producer's rent. - PRODUCT
The number or sum obtained by adding one number or quantity to itself as many times as there are units in another number; the number resulting from the multiplication of two or more numbers; as, the product of the multiplication of 7 by 5 is 35. - PRODUCTION
1. The act or process or producing, bringing forth, or exhibiting to view; as, the production of commodities, of a witness. 2. That which is produced, yielded, or made, whether naturally, or by the application of intelligence and labor; as, the - PRODUCTIBILITY
The state of being productible; producibility. Ruskin. - PRODUCIBLE
Capable of being produced, brought forward, brought forth, generated, made, or extended. -- Pro*du"ci*ble*ness, n. - PRODUCTIBLE
Capable of being produced; producible. - ZYGOSPORE
Same as Zygosperm. A spore formed by the union of several zoöspores; -- called also zygozoöspore. - PRODUCER'S GOODS
Goods that satisfy wants only indirectly as factors in the production of other goods, such as tools and raw material; -- called also instrumental goods, auxiliary goods, intermediate goods, or goods of the second and higher orders, and disting. - PRODUCE RACE
A race to be run by the produce of horses named or described at the time of entry. - PRODUCTIVE
1. Having the quality or power of producing; yielding or furnishing results; as, productive soil; productive enterprises; productive labor, that which increases the number or amount of products. 2. Bringing into being; causing to exist; producing; - ORGANISM
An organized being; a living body, either vegetable or animal, compozed of different organs or parts with functions which are separate, but mutually dependent, and essential to the life of the individual. Note: Some of the lower forms of life are - OVERPRODUCTION
Excessive production; supply beyond the demand. J. S. Mill. - REPRODUCTORY
Reproductive. - REPRODUCER
One who, or that which, reproduces. Burke. - MICROORGANISM; MICRO-ORGANISM
Any microscopic form of life; -- particularly applied to bacteria and similar organisms, esp. such are supposed to cause infectious diseases. - REPRODUCE
To produce again. Especially: To bring forward again; as, to reproduce a witness; to reproduce charges; to reproduce a play. To cause to exist again. Those colors are unchangeable, and whenever all those rays with those their colors are mixed again - ENTORGANISM
An internal parasitic organism. - ECTORGANISM
An external parasitic organism. - REPRODUCTION
the process by which plants and animals give rise to offspring. Note: There are two distinct methods of reproduction; viz.: asexual reproduction and sexual reproduction . In both cases the new individual is developed from detached portions of - BY-PRODUCT
A secondary or additional product; something produced, as in the course of a manufacture, in addition to the principal product. - PROTOORGANISM; PROTOOERGANISM
An organism whose nature is so difficult to determine that it might be referred to either the animal or the vegetable kingdom.