英:[ˈfʌŋgɔɪd]
美:[ˈfʌŋˌɡɔɪd]
英:[ˈfʌŋgɔɪd]
美:[ˈfʌŋˌɡɔɪd]
fun·goid
fuhng goId
词根:fungal
adj.fungal 真菌的(等于fungous)
fungicidal 真菌的;杀霉菌的
fungous 似真菌的;海绵质的
adjective
characteristic of or similar to a fungus.
noun
a fungus or a similar growth.
蕈状的,蕈样的
The first known use of fungoid was in 1758
fungoidadjective
resembling, characteristic of, caused by, or being a fungus a fungoid growth
a fungoid ulcer
1 He is perfectly right in all he says with reference to the useful and preventive results of the use of "common garden" earth, or vegetable mould in checking any fungoid development, Saprolegnia or other.
2 The details that define their characters, too, are precise and impeccably off-center, a perfect match for their stained, saggy corduroys and fungoid gray hair.
3 I think I even bit something grisly and bloodless, like fungoid tissue, but I refuse to remember for certain.
4 He lay flat on the floating fungoid, and strove to reach out and grasp the end of the spear.
5 DRY ROT, a fungoid disease in timber which occasions the destruction of its fibres, and reduces it eventually to a mass of dry dust.
6 Hydrophylax bahuvistara, a species of fungoid frog found in India, secretes a substance that protects against viruses.
7 It increases the capillary condition of the soil, prevents fungoid diseases, and promotes the growth of the more nutritive herbage in pasture-land.
8 Here and there amid the heavy moss fat fungoid growths thrust up their heads, dead white, or cold red, or pink, or spotted orange.
9 The White Pine, moreover, has so far escaped serious attacks of insects and dangerous fungoid diseases which now threaten to exterminate in different parts of Europe extensive plantations of Larch.
10 One might have compared Meeus’s voice to the voice of a violin—a violin that had been attacked by some strange fungoid growth that had filled its interior and dulled the sounding board.
11 A fungoid ulcer is one in which the bottom of the ulcer projects beyond the edge of the skin.
12 It should be remembered that when bulbous plants are attacked by fungoid diseases, referred to at p.
13 When hydrolysed these fungoid celluloses yield, in addition to monoses, glucosamine and acetic acid.
14 Fungoid Diseases.—Of the fungoid diseases affecting bulbous plants happily there are few; and even these are not troublesome to any alarming extent in the open air.
15 The aliens kept these buildings in some state of repair, and there was a communal garden of the planet’s dark, fungoid plant life.
16 There are then fungoid growths within, and the heat and tenderness denote the condition of the surface, which cannot without much violence be beheld.
17 In regard to the lower types of fungoid growth, such as yeast, the results of investigators are more at variance.
18 Apple orchards are not immune from insect pests and fungoid diseases, and an enormous business is now done in spraying machines and various insecticides.
19 It was merely a 'grotesque, fungoid growth which clustered round the primeval thread of ancestor worship,' more or less a 'pathological phenomenon closely allied with neurosis and hysteria.'
20 The extra something is a comet from outer space, releasing its seeds, plugging into the fungoid mycelium—which, from an alien perspective, is the largest and most evolutionarily successful creature on the planet.