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tuber
1[ too-ber, tyoo- ]
noun
- Botany. a fleshy, usually oblong or rounded thickening or outgrowth, as the potato, of a subterranean stem or shoot, bearing minute scalelike leaves with buds or eyes in their axils from which new plants may arise.
- Anatomy. a rounded swelling or protuberance; a tuberosity; a tubercle.
tuber
2[ too-ber, tyoo- ]
noun
- a person or thing that forms, installs, or operates with tubes.
tuber
/ ˈtjuːbə /
noun
- a fleshy underground stem (as in the potato) or root (as in the dahlia) that is an organ of vegetative reproduction and food storage
- anatomy a raised area; swelling
tuber
/ to̅o̅′bər /
- The thickened part of an underground stem of a plant, such as the potato, bearing buds from which new plant shoots arise.
- Compare bulb
Other Words From
- tuber·less adjective
- tuber·oid adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of tuber1
Example Sentences
These defensive chemicals are found inside cells throughout the cassava plant's leaves, stem and tubers, where they usually sit idle.
Cedar just smiled at me as she nibbled on a cattail tuber.
Grizzlies once roamed the North Cascades in great numbers, digging up tubers, foraging for berries and going about their business as ecosystem engineers.
If this is your first year growing these bountiful blooms, you might be questioning how to get from a gnarly potatolike tuber to armloads of cut flowers.
In southern Malawi, in a district called Chikwawa, some residents were wading into a river rife with crocodiles to collect a wild tuber known as nyika to curb their hunger.
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