meristem

See also: Meristem

English

Etymology

From German Meristem, from Ancient Greek μεριστός (meristós, divided), from μερίζω (merízō), from μέρος (méros) + στέμμα (stémma, wreath, garland). First used in 1858 by Swiss botanist Carl Wilhelm von Nägeli (1817–1891).[1]

Noun

meristem (plural meristems)

  1. (botany) The plant tissue composed of totipotent cells that allows plant growth.
    Coordinate term: cambium
    • 2020, Janet Chernela, quotee, “Life Finds A Way”, in Jonathan Elmore, editor, Fiction and the Sixth Mass Extinction, Rowman & Littlefield, →ISBN:
      By looking back at a past populated by beings of grotesque difference, humans could place themselves at the apical meristem—the growing tip—of the future.

Derived terms

Translations

References

  1. Carl Nägeli (1858) “Ueber das Wachsthum des Stammes und der Wurzel bei den Gefässpflanzen”, in Beiträge zur Wissenschaftlichen Botanik [Contributions to Scientific Botany] (in German), page 2:[S]o giebt es auch hauptspächlich zwei Arten von Theilungsgewebe. Das Eine ist dasjenige, woraus anfänglich das ganze Organ besteht, und das oft auch noch späterhin, zuweilen zeitlebens thätig ist; ich will es Meristem nennen.

Anagrams

Romanian

Etymology

Borrowed from French méristème.

Noun

meristem n (plural meristeme)

  1. meristem

Declension

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