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caducous

[ kuh-doo-kuhs, -dyoo- ]

adjective

  1. Botany. dropping off very early, as leaves.
  2. Zoology. subject to shedding.


caducous

/ kəˈdjuːkəs /

adjective

  1. biology (of parts of a plant or animal) shed during the life of the organism
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

caducous

/ kə-do̅o̅kəs /

  1. Detaching or dropping off at an early stage of development. The gills of most amphibians and the sepals or stipules of certain plants are caducous.
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Word History and Origins

Origin of caducous1

First recorded in 1675–85 for obsolete sense; 1805–10 for current senses; from Latin cadūcus “unsteady, perishable,” equivalent to cad(ere) “to fall” + -ūcus adjective suffix ( -ous )
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Word History and Origins

Origin of caducous1

C17: from Latin cadūcus falling, from cadere to fall
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Example Sentences

They invariably come laden with words that seem meant to prove his vocabulary is bigger than yours: flocculent, crapulent, caducous, anaglypta, mephitic, velutinous.

Embryo straight.—Trees, with rounded heart-shaped simple leaves, caducous stipules, and red-purple flowers in umbel-like clusters along the branches of the last or preceding years, appearing before the leaves, acid to the taste.

Sepals.—Three; strongly arched, covered with bristly appressed hairs; caducous.

Calyx, 5 rounded sepals, tuberculate at the base, imbricated, caducous.

The first and the second glumes are unequal, persistent or separately caducous.

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caducityCadwalader