phyllo- 或 phyll-
pref.(前缀)
语源
pref.(前缀)
- Leaf:
表示“叶”:
phylloid.
叶状的
语源
- Greek
希腊语 - from phullon [leaf] * see bhel- 3
源自 phullon [叶子] *参见 bhel- 3
phyllo- or (before a vowel) phyll-
combining form
leaf
⇒
phyllopod
Origin
from Greek phullon leafphyllo-
Word Origin
1
a combining form meaning “leaf,” used in the formation of compound words:
phyllopod.
Also, phyll-, -phyll.
Origin
< Greek, combining form of phýllon
Related Words
- phylloxera
- phylloclade
- phyllogenetic
- phyllomania
- phyllophagous
- phyllophore
phyllo-a word element meaning 'leaf'.
Also, (before vowels), phyll-. [Greek, combining form of phyllon]
phyllo-
combining form
⇨ see phyll-
combining form
⇨ see phyll-
phyllo-
combining form
- of a leaf; relating to leaves表示“叶”, “与叶有关的”:
-
phyllotaxis.
词源
from Greek phullon 'leaf'.
1879 Watts Dict. Chem. VIII. 452The basic component , *phyllochromogen, is capable of assuming the most various colours under the influence of oxidising and reducing agents. [ of chlorophyll]
1881 Ibid. 1637Chlorophyll..When digested with hydrochloric acid..splits up into phylloxanthin, a brown substance,..and Frémy's *phyllocyanic acid, an olive-green substance.
1861 Bentley Man. Bot. 744M. Frémy..has ascertained that it is composed of two colouring principles,—one a yellow, which he has termed phylloxanthine; and the other a blue, which he has called *phyllocyanine. [ chlorophyll]
1885 G. L. Goodale Physiol. Bot. (1892) 291Frémy's later researches have led him to regard the so-called phyllocyanin as really an acid (phyllocyanic).
1859 Huxley Oceanic Hydrozoa 14They always contain a diverticulum of the somatic cavity, or *phyllocyst.
1877 ― Anat. Inv. Anim. iii. 139Phyllocyst or cavity of hydrophyllium with its process.
1890 Cent. Dict. ,*Phyllogen.
1893 in Syd.Soc. Lex.
1898 Nature 26 May 74/2 Theories of *phyllogenetic development.
1858 Mayne Expos. Lex. ,Phyllogenus,..that which grows upon leaves..: *phyllogenous.
1670 E. Tonge in Phil. Trans. V. 2073Whether the delay of Sap, staying Fruit and Blossoms, as is suppos'd, by tying, will cure the *Phyllo-mania, as Cross⁓hacking?
1856 Grindon Life viii. (1875) 97No plant can suffer from phyllomania and be fruitful at the same moment.
1889 Trans. Lancs. & Cheshire AntiquarianSoc. VII. 166The forms of ornament demonstrably due to structure require a name... Those taken from animals are called zoomorphs, and those from plants *phyllomorphs.
1895 A. C. Haddon Evol. Art 126The terms ‘zoomorph’ and ‘phyllomorph’ have been employed for the representation in art of plants and animals.
1882 Academy 4 Feb. 76 It was zoomorphic, but not *phyllomorphic. [ Celtic art]
1849 Fraser's Mag. XXXIX. 669Classified under the head of the Walking Leaf, or *Phyllomorphous insects.
1886 Cassell's Encycl. Dict. ,*Phyllomorphy, the same as Phyllody.
1858 Mayne Expos. Lex. 954/1The dusky or brown colouring matter of the leaves of plants: *phyllophein.
1893 Syd. Soc. Lex. ,Phæophyll, the brown colouring-matter of the Fucoïdeæ; also called Phyllophæin.
1848 Lindley Introd. Bot. (ed. 4) I. 227The growing point, or *phyllophore . [ of Mirbel]
1885 G. L. Goodale Physiol. Bot. (1892) 132That portion of a palm-stem which lies above the lowest active leaves..is of a conical shape..often much elongated, and carries all the new and forming leaves. It is known as the Phyllophore.
1828 Webster, *Phyllophorous.
1955 F. T. Last in Trans. Brit. Mycol.Soc. XXXVIII. 221It is suggested that, as with roots and the ‘rhizosphere’, leaves have a ‘*phyllosphere’, with a characteristic micro-flora that may contain many species.
1956 J. Ruinen in Nature 4 Feb. 221/2These observations suggested the existence of a characteristic milieu which is conditioned by the leaf, and may be called, in analogy with the rhizosphere, the ‘phyllosphere’.
1972 J. G. Cruickshank SoilGeogr. vi. 175On the surface of living aerial parts of plants, particularly on the leaves—the phyllosphere.
1858 Mayne Expos. Lex. 954/2The yellow colouring matter of the leaf of a plant: *phylloxanthin.
1861 Bentley Man. Bot. 745The experiments of M. Frémy show, that the yellow leaves of autumn contain no phyllocyanine, and hence that their colour is entirely due to the phylloxanthine, either in its original condition or in an altered state.
1965 Trans. Brit. Mycol.Soc. XLVIII. 603Several groups of micro-organisms..are known to occur in this zone, termed originally the ‘phyllosphere’ by Last (1955), and now recognized as the phylloplane.
1974 Ann. Rev. Phytopathol. XII. 206X phaseoli [ anthomonas] var. fuscans survived on the phylloplane of primary leaves of Phaseolus vulgaris cultivar Sanilac, but disappeared quickly from the unifoliate leaves.
1987 Phaff & Starmer in Rose & Harrison Yeasts (ed. 2) I. v. 151The phylloplane is a good substrate for saprophytic organisms.
phyllo-
before vowels phyll-, word-forming element meaning "leaf," from Greek phyllo-, comb. form of phyllon "leaf," from PIE *bhol-yo- "leaf," suffixed form of root *bhel- (3) "to thrive, bloom" (see folio).
phyllo-
combining form
see phyll-
see phyll-
phyllo-
Prefix
- Forming compound words relating to leaves.
Etymology
Combining form of Ancient Greek φύλλον (phúllon, “leaf”).
Derived terms
English words prefixed with phyllo-