spore / spɔr, spoʊr /

💦中学词汇孢子芽孢菌种

spore2 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. Biology. a walled, single- to many-celled, reproductive body of an organism, capable of giving rise to a new individual either directly or indirectly.
  2. a germ, germ cell, seed, or the like.
v. 无主动词 verb

spored, spor·ing.

  1. to bear or produce spores.

spore 近义词

spore

等同于 seed

spore

等同于 ovum

spore 的近义词 5
spore

等同于 cell

spore

等同于 germ

更多spore例句

  1. Plant pollen and fungal spores are aerosols that can waft long distances.
  2. It wasn’t a total surprise when several prominent science publications moved years ago to curtail or eliminate comments on their websites, encouraging readers to release their precious thought spores into the social media wilderness instead.
  3. Miroslav Žít, an amateur photographer from Prachatice in the Czech Republic, snapped this photo of a stunning moss capsule packed with spores almost ready to take flight.
  4. The spores ride the wind once released, sometimes traveling long distances and staying dormant until conditions are right for growth.
  5. As the water evaporates from the spores the muscles contract, which resets the cycle.
  6. Anthrax, or Bacillus anthracis, is spore-forming bacteria found in soil that most commonly affects cattle.
  7. The CDC says that about 60 percent of the people who inhale the spore do not contract valley fever.
  8. Spore, another spinoff, taught players about the randomly branching paths evolution can take.
  9. Budding (as in yeast) and spore formation are familiar to us in plants.
  10. At length a hard coat forms around this cell, which has now become a spore.
  11. Thus the spore of the sun—the whispering spheres—found a set of conditions fitted for growth.
  12. This destroys the resisting power of the spore membrane and allows the stain to reach the interior.
  13. This dissolves out any fat or crystals that might otherwise retain the "spore" stain.