- enterocoele
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n. [Gr. enteron, intestine; koilos, hollow]Coelom that arises as an outpocketing of the archenteron.
Online Dictionary of Invertebrate Zoology. A.R. Maggenti and S.L. Gardne. 2005.
Online Dictionary of Invertebrate Zoology. A.R. Maggenti and S.L. Gardne. 2005.
Enterocoele — En ter*o*c[oe]le , n. [Gr. e nteron an intestine + koi^lon a hollow.] (Anat.) A perivisceral cavity which arises as an outgrowth or outgrowths from the digestive tract; distinguished from a {schizoc[oe]le}, which arises by a splitting of the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
enterocoele — or enterocoel [en′tər ō sēl΄] n. [ ENTERO + COELE] a coelomic cavity, as in starfishes and sea urchins, formed from a pouchlike outward fold of the wall of the archenteron … English World dictionary
enterocoele — or enterocoel noun Date: 1877 a coelom originating by outgrowth from the archenteron • enterocoelous adjective • enterocoelic adjective … New Collegiate Dictionary
enterocoele — /en teuhr euh seel /, n. Anat. the body cavity formed from an outpocketing of the archenteron, typical of echinoderms and chordates. Also, enterocoel. [1875 80; ENTERO + COELE] * * * … Universalium
enterocoele — en·tero·coele or en·tero·coel ent ə rō .sēl n a coelom originating by outgrowth from the archenteron en·tero·coe·lous .ent ə rō sē ləs or en·tero·coe·lic lik adj * * * en·tero·coele (en″tər o seґle) [entero + Gr. koilia belly] the body … Medical dictionary
enterocoele — en·ter·o·coele … English syllables
enterocoele — en•ter•o•coele or en•ter•o•coel [[t]ˈɛn tər əˌsil[/t]] n. dvl ivt a body cavity formed from an outpocketing of the archenteron, typical of echinoderms and chordates • Etymology: 1875–80 … From formal English to slang
enterocoele — … Useful english dictionary
enterocoelomate — en·tero·coel·om·ate (en″tər o sēlґo māt) 1. having an enterocoele. 2. any of a group of animals, such as echinoderms and chordates, having a body cavity (enterocoele) derived from the archenteron … Medical dictionary
-coele — or coel noun combining form Etymology: probably from New Latin coela, from neuter plural of coelus hollow, concave, from Greek koilos, from koilos cavity ; chamber ; ventricle < blastocoel > < entero … New Collegiate Dictionary