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tapetum
[ tuh-pee-tuhm ]
noun
, plural ta·pe·ta [t, uh, -, pee, -t, uh].
- Botany. a layer of cells often investing the archespore in a developing sporangium and absorbed as the spores mature.
- Anatomy, Zoology. any of certain membranous layers or layered coverings, as in the choroid of the eyes of certain animals.
tapetum
/ təˈpiːtəm /
noun
- a layer of nutritive cells in the sporangia of ferns and anthers of flowering plants that surrounds developing spore cells
- a membranous reflecting layer of cells in the choroid of the eye of nocturnal vertebrates
- a similar structure in the eyes of certain nocturnal insects
- anatomy a covering layer of cells behind the retina of the eye
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Derived Forms
- taˈpetal, adjective
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Other Words From
- ta·petal adjective
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Word History and Origins
Origin of tapetum1
1705–15; < New Latin, special use of Medieval Latin tapētum coverlet ( Latin, only plural) < Greek tapēt- (stem of tápēs ) carpet, rug
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Word History and Origins
Origin of tapetum1
C18: from New Latin, from Medieval Latin: covering, from Latin tapēte carpet, from Greek tapēs carpet
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Example Sentences
The subject, however, of the various colours of the tapetum in different animals is not yet understood.
From Project Gutenberg
Iris tapetum: the pigment layer of the compound eye just below the crystalline cone.
From Project Gutenberg
The tapetum lucidum is found in Ungulata, Cetacea and Carnivora.
From Project Gutenberg
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