strobilate

English

Etymology

From strobilus + -ate.

Verb

strobilate (third-person singular simple present strobilates, present participle strobilating, simple past and past participle strobilated)

  1. (intransitive, biology) To produce a strobilus (layered, conelike structure).
    • 2007 September 16, “‘My Family Has High Hopes for Me Because They Know I’m Going to Do Great Things.’”, in New York Times:
      So that’s what we try to do, make them strobilate faster.
    • 2014, Theo Tait, ‘Water-Borne Zombies’, London Review of Books, vol. 36 no. 5:
      These, in turn, reproduce by cloning; when conditions are right, they ‘strobilate’, elongating and splitting into a stack of discs which develop into larvae, and break away to become medusae.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.