funiform

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English

Etymology

From Latin funis (rope, cord) + -form. First attested in 1862.

Adjective

funiform (comparative more funiform, superlative most funiform)

  1. (chiefly biology, especially botany) Resembling a rope or cord.
    • 1862, William Wilde, A Descriptive Catalogue of the Antiquities of Gold in the Museum of the Royal Irish Academy, page 29:
      A series of small conical projections surround the edge, within which there is a double funiform elevation, similar to that in the diadem.
    • 2003, V. I. Grubov, Plants of Central Asia - Plant Collection from China and Mongolia, Vol. 7: Liliaceae to Orchidaceae, CRC Press, →ISBN:
      Plant with thick funiform or fusiform roots.
    • 2007 January 5, L. I. Malyschev, Flora of Siberia, volume 12, CRC Press, →ISBN, page 92:
      Root reduced, with funiform, somewhat thickened secondary roots.