- tetramerous
- te·tram·er·ous
English syllables. 2014.
English syllables. 2014.
Tetramerous — Te*tram er*ous, a. [Tetra + Gr. ? part.] 1. (Bot.) Having the parts arranged in sets of four; as, a tetramerous flower. [1913 Webster] 2. (Zo[ o]l.) Having four joints in each of the tarsi; said of certain insects. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
tetramerous — [te tram′ər əs] adj. [ TETRA + MEROUS] Biol. made up of four parts or divisions; in multiples of four … English World dictionary
tetramerous — adjective Etymology: New Latin tetramerus, from Greek tetramerēs, from tetra + meros part more at merit Date: 1826 having or characterized by the presence of four parts or of parts arranged in sets of four < tetramerous flowers > … New Collegiate Dictionary
tetramerous — adjective in four parts: in a flower each whorl (of flower parts) has four flower parts. : As the name suggests the crucifers have tetramerous flowers. See Also: tetramery … Wiktionary
Tetramerous — … Wikipedia
tetramerous — adj. [Gr. tetra, four; meros, part] 1. Having a four jointed tarsus. 2. Having body parts arranged in fours … Dictionary of invertebrate zoology
tetramerous — tetramerism, n. /te tram euhr euhs/, adj. 1. consisting of or divided into four parts. 2. Bot. (of flowers) having the parts of a whorl arranged in fours or multiples of four. [1820 30; < NL tetramerus < Gk tetramerés having four parts. See TETRA … Universalium
tetramerous — [tɪ tram(ə)rəs] adjective Botany & Zoology having parts arranged in groups of four. ↘consisting of four joints or parts … English new terms dictionary
tetramerous — te•tram•er•ous [[t]tɛˈtræm ər əs[/t]] adj. 1) consisting of or divided into four parts 2) bot (of flowers) having the parts of a whorl arranged in fours or multiples of four • Etymology: 1820–30; < NL tetramerus < Gk tetramerḗs. See tetra … From formal English to slang
tetramerous — /tɛˈtræmərəs/ (say te tramuhruhs) adjective 1. consisting of or divided into four parts. 2. Botany (of flowers) having four members in each whorl. {New Latin tetramerus, from Greek tetramerēs four parted} …