英:[klʌb mɔs]
美:[klʌb mɔs]
英:[klʌb mɔs]
美:[klʌb mɔs]
石松
noun
any of an order (Lycopodiales) of primitive vascular plants (such as ground pine) often with the sporangia borne in club-shaped strobili
noun
any of an order (Lycopodiales) of primitive vascular plants (such as ground pine) often with the sporangia borne in club-shaped strobili
The first known use of club moss was in 1597
cloud1 of 2noun
a visible mass of particles of water or ice in the form of fog, mist, or haze usually high in the air
a usually visible mass of tiny particles in the air or bits of matter between stars
a group of charged particles (as electrons)
something resembling or thought to be like a cloud under a cloud of suspicion
a cloud of mosquitoes
something that appears dark or threatening
clouds of war
the computers and connections that support cloud computing
storing files in the cloud
cloud2 of 2verb
to make or become cloudy
to darken or hide with or as if by a cloud
smog clouded our view
cloud1 of 2noun
a visible mass of particles of water or ice in the form of fog, mist, or haze usually high in the air
a usually visible mass of tiny particles in the air or bits of matter between stars
a group of charged particles (as electrons)
something resembling or thought to be like a cloud under a cloud of suspicion
a cloud of mosquitoes
something that appears dark or threatening
clouds of war
the computers and connections that support cloud computing
storing files in the cloud
cloud2 of 2verb
to make or become cloudy
to darken or hide with or as if by a cloud
smog clouded our view
club fungusnoun
any of a group of fungi that have the hyphae divided by partitions and a special cell for forming spores and that include rusts, smuts, and mushrooms
club mossnoun
any of an order of low often trailing evergreen plants (as the ground pine) having branching stems covered with small mosslike leaves and reproducing by spores usually borne in club-shaped cones
club mossnoun
any of an order (Lycopodiales) of primitive vascular plants including several (genus Lycopodium) whose spores are used as a dusting powder and to coat pills
1 The club moss, or the beaver, or the chipping sparrow, or the black crappie, or wild rice?
2 Plants that won't overgrow the container, such as boxwood, croton, Joseph's coat, pineapple verbena and twiggy spikemoss for sun-loving plants, and gnome ivy, golden club moss, Irish or Scottish club moss and miniature ferns for shade-loving plants.
3 But during the Carboniferous period, which stretched from about 360 to 300 million years ago, the region was a subtropical swamp dominated by lycopids, giant relatives of today’s club mosses that could grow over a hundred feet tall.
4 Flowers had not evolved, and the ground was dominated by primitive plants called lycopods (ancestors of club mosses and quillworts).
5 Huperzine A is one of the alkaloids contained in a plant known as Chinese club moss.
石杉碱甲是一种碱,存在于象中国杵状苔藓这种类型的植物当中.