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Webster 1913 Edition


Adnate

Ad′nate

,
Adj.
[L.
adnatus
, p. p. of
adnasci
. See
Adnascent
, and cf.
Agnate
.]
1.
(Physiol.)
Grown to congenitally.
2.
(Bot.)
Growing together; – said only of organic cohesion of unlike parts.
An anther is
adnate
when fixed by its whole length to the filament.
Gray.
3.
(Zool.)
Growing with one side adherent to a stem; – a term applied to the lateral zooids of corals and other compound animals.

Webster 1828 Edition


Adnate

AD'NATE

,
Adj.
[L. ad and natus, grown.]
In botany, pressing close to the stem, or growing to it.

Definition 2024


adnate

adnate

English

Adnate gills on a mushroom
Adnate gills on Entoloma haastii

Adjective

adnate (comparative more adnate, superlative most adnate)

  1. (botany, mycology) Linked or fused to something unlike itself.
    Adnate mushroom gills are broadly attached to the stalk slightly above the bottom of the gill, with most of the gill fused to the stem.
    An anther is adnate when fixed by its whole length to the filament.
    • 1889, John Gilbert Baker, Handbook of the Bromeliaceae, page 116,
      The ovary is more adnate to the calyx than in any other species of the genus.
    • 1995, Thomas H. Nash, Corinna Gries, J. A. Elix, A Revision of the Lichen Genus Xanthoparmelia in South America, page 61,
      Morphologically and chemically X. isidiigera is also similar to X. australasica, but the isidia are typically thinner and more coralloid branched and the thallus more adnate in the latter species.
    • 2009, Flora Neotropica, Issue 104, page 88,
      Morphologically, Hypotrachyna kriegeri closely resembles more adnate morphotypes of H. imbricatula.
  2. (zoology) Growing with one side adherent to a stem; applied to the lateral zooids of corals and other compound animals. in fish, having the eyes fused and unable to rotate independently
    • 1988, Henry W. Robison, Thomas M Buchanan, Fishes of Arkansas, page 312,
      It differs from N. eleutherus by possessing a more adnate adipose fin and more prominent saddles and from N. albater by having 8 soft pectoral rays, a submarginal adipose bar, and no prominent basicaudal bar (Douglas 1972).

Translations

Derived terms

Antonyms


Latin

Verb

adnāte

  1. second-person plural present active imperative of adnō