esquamulose
English
WOTD – 11 June 2019
Etymology
e- (prefix forming adjectives with the sense of lacking something) + squamulose; squamulose is derived from New Latin squāmulōsus (“squamulose”), from Latin squamula (“small scales”) (diminutive of squāma (“scale of a fish or reptile; item shaped like a scale, flake”)) + -ōsus (suffix meaning ‘full of, prone to’).[1][2] The English word is analysable as e- + squamula + -ose.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /iːˈskweɪmjʊləʊs/
- (General American) IPA(key): /iˈskweɪmjʊloʊs/
- Hyphenation: esqua‧mul‧ose
Adjective
esquamulose (not comparable)
- (botany, mycology) Not covered in scales or scale-like objects; having a smooth skin or outer covering.
- Synonym: scaleless
- Antonyms: scaly, squamose, squamous, squamulose
- 1884, Lucien M[arcus] Underwood, “Article I.—Descriptive Catalogue of the North American Hepaticæ, North of Mexico”, in Bulletin of the Illinois State Laboratory of Natural History, Normal, Illinois, volume II, Peoria, Ill.: J. W. Franks & Sons, printers and binders, OCLC 1060557287, order II (Marchantiaceæ Corda.), section VII (Dumortiera Nees.), paragraph 1, page 38:
- D[umortiera] hirsuta Nees. Diœcious; thallus 5–15 cm. long, 1.3–2 cm. wide, thin, deep-green, becoming blackish, plane and entire on the margins, exareolate and naked, or sometimes with a delicate, coarsely reticulated, closely appressed, cobweb-like pubescence above, hirsute and esquamulose beneath; […]
- 1890 February 5, George King, “VIII.—Materials for a Flora of the Malayan Peninsula.”, in Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, volume LIX, part II (Natural Science), number 2, Calcutta: Printed at the Baptist Mission Press, OCLC 1047510400, order XV (Ternstrœmiaceæ), section 6 (Saurauja, Willd.), page 198:
- Saurauja nudiflora, […]. A tree 20 to 30 feet high; youngest branchlets dark-coloured, squamulose towards the apex; the older esquamulose, pale, faintly striate.
- 1894, James M[orrison] Crombie, A Monograph of Lichens Found in Britain: Being a Descriptive Catalogue of the Species in the Herbarium of the British Museum, London: Printed by order of the Trustees [of the British Museum] […], OCLC 7390762786, page 164:
- Hookeri […] In the only British specimen seen these are about 1 in. high, robust, entirely esquamulose, with the apothecia somewhat large, conglomerate, and having a few minute squamules intermixed.
- 1909 January, G. K. Merrill, “Lichen Notes No. 7. Cladonia multiformis (nom. nov.) Bry. 6: 1908.”, in Annie Morrill Smith, editor, The Bryologist: An Illustrated Bimonthly Devoted to North American Mosses, Hepatics and Lichens, volume XII, number 1, New York, N.Y.: Published by the editor, […], OCLC 695468007, page 4:
- Cladonia multiformis. […] Podetia irregularly sub-cylindrical at the base, commonly entire but sometimes fissured and gaping, slender or stout, simple or pseudo-branched by obliteration of an early scyphus, esquamulose or more or less leafy throughout, […]
- 1974, D. C. Lindsay, “Systematic Account”, in The Macrolichens of South Georgia (British Antarctic Survey Scientific Reports; no. 89), London: British Antarctic Survey, National Environment Research Council, OCLC 3226188, archived from the original on 19 February 2019, section 14 (Descriptions of Genera and Species), page 22:
- Both subspecies may superficially resemble C. furcata var. furcata, but can be distinguished by the imperforate axils and esquamulose podetia.
Translations
not covered in scales or scale-like objects
References
- “e-, prefix2”, in OED Online
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, January 2018; “e-” (US) / “e-” (UK) in Oxford Dictionaries, Oxford University Press. - Compare “squamulose, adj.”, in OED Online
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1915.
Further reading
- “esquamulose” in Merriam–Webster Online Dictionary.
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