a. Of or pertaining to fungi. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ Cf. F. fongate. ] (Chem.) A salt of fungic acid.
n. [ L. fungus mushroom, dolt. ] A blockhead; a dolt; a fool. [ Obs. ] Burton. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. pl.;
☞ The
‖n. [ NL., fr. L. fungus mushroom: cf. F. fongie. ] (Zool.) A genus of simple, stony corals; -- so called because they are usually flat and circular, with radiating plates, like the gills of a mushroom. Some of them are eighteen inches in diameter. [ 1913 Webster ]
a. (Zool.) Of or pertaining to the
n. pl. [ LL. (res) fungibiles, probably fr. L. fungi to discharge. “A barbarous term, supposed to have originated in the use of the words functionem recipere in the Digeste.” Bouvier. “Called fungibiles, quia una alterius vice fungitur.” John Taylor (1755). Cf. Function. ]
a. [ L. fungus mushroom: cf. F. fungique, fongique. ] (Chem.) Pertaining to, or obtained from, mushrooms;
n. [ Fungi + -cide, fr. L. caedere to kill. ] Anything that kills fungi. --
a. [ Eungus + -form: cf. F. fongiforme. ] Shaped like a fungus or mushroom. [ 1913 Webster ]
Fungiform papillæ (Anat.),
‖pl. [ L. imperfecti imperfect. ] (Bot.) A heterogenous phylum of fungi which lack a sexual phase, or of which the sexual phase is not known. Some undoubtedly represent the conidium stages of various Ascomycetes. It is not considered a natural phylum, and is also called the
a. Shaped like a small fungus. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ L. fungus mushroom: cf. F, fongine, fungine. ] (Chem.) A name formerly given to cellulose found in certain fungi and mushrooms. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ L. fungus mushroom: cf. F. pongite. ] (Paleon.) A fossil coral resembling Fungia. [ 1913 Webster ]
a. [ L. fungus + vorare to eat greedily: cf. F. fongivore. ] (Zool.) Eating fungi; -- said of certain insects and snails. [ 1913 Webster ]
a. [ Fungus + -oil: cf. F. fongoïde. ] Like a fungus; fungous; spongy.
n. A mycologist. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ Fungus + -logy. ] Mycology. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ Cf. F. fungosité, fongosité. ] The quality of that which is fungous; fungous excrescence. Dunglison. [ 1913 Webster ]
a. [ L. fungosus: cf. F. fungueux. ]
n.;
☞ The fungi are all destitute of chorophyll, and, therefore, to be supplied with elaborated nourishment, must live as saprophytes or parasites. They range in size from single microscopic cells to systems of entangled threads many feet in extent, which develop reproductive bodies as large as a man's head. The vegetative system consists of septate or rarely unseptate filaments called hyphæ; the aggregation of hyphæ into structures of more or less definite form is known as the mycelium. See Fungi, in the Supplement. [ 1913 Webster ]
adj. resembling a fungus or fungi.