Word Meanings - OVICAPSULE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
The outer layer of a Graafian follicle.
Related words: (words related to OVICAPSULE)
- OUTER
Being on the outside; external; farthest or farther from the interior, from a given station, or from any space or position regarded as a center or starting place; -- opposed to inner; as, the outer wall; the outer court or gate; the outer stump - LAYERING
A propagating by layers. Gardner. - OUTERLY
1. Utterly; entirely. Chaucer. 2. Toward the outside. Grew. - GRAAFIAN
Pertaining to, or discovered by, Regnier de Graaf, a Dutch physician. Graafian follicles or vesicles, small cavities in which the ova are developed in the ovaries of mammals, and by the bursting of which they are discharged. - OUTERMOST
Being on the extreme external part; farthest outward; as, the outermost row. Boyle. - LAYER
That which is laid; a stratum; a bed; one thickness, course, or fold laid over another; as, a layer of clay or of sand in the earth; a layer of bricks, or of plaster; the layers of an onion. 3. A shoot or twig of a plant, not detached - FOLLICLE
A simple podlike pericarp which contains several seeds and opens along the inner or ventral suture, as in the peony, larkspur and milkweed. A small cavity, tubular depression, or sac; as, a hair follicle. A simple gland or glandular cavity; a crypt. - WAYLAYER
One who waylays another. - SHOUTER
One who shouts. - SOUTER
A shoemaker; a cobbler. Chaucer. There is no work better than another to please God: . . . to wash dishes, to be a souter, or an apostle, -- all is one. Tyndale. - TRACKLAYER
Any workman engaged in work involved in putting the track in place. -- Track"lay`ing, n. - FLOUTER
One who flouts; a mocker. - PLOUTER
To wade or move about with splashing; to dabble; also, to potter; trifle; idle. I did not want to plowter about any more. Kipling. - TOUTER
One who seeks customers, as for an inn, a public conveyance, shops, and the like: hence, an obtrusive candidate for office. The prey of ring droppers, . . . duffers, touters, or any of those bloodless sharpers who are, perhaps, better known to the - DISPLAYER
One who, or that which, displays. - SOUTERLY
Of or pertaining to a cobbler or cobblers; like a cobbler; hence, vulgar; low. - POUTER
A variety of the domestic pigeon remarkable for the extent to which it is able to dilate its throat and breast. (more info) 1. One who, or that which, pouts. 2. Etym: - CLOUTERLY
Clumsy; awkward. Rough-hewn, cloutery verses. E. Phillips. - ACCOUTER; ACCOUTRE
To furnish with dress, or equipments, esp. those for military service; to equip; to attire; to array. Bot accoutered like young men. Shak. For this, in rags accoutered are they seen. Dryden. Accoutered with his burden and his staff. Wordsworth. - PLAYER
1. One who plays, or amuses himself; one without serious aims; an idler; a trifler. Shak. 2. One who plays any game. 3. A dramatic actor. Shak. 4. One who plays on an instrument of music. "A cunning player on a harp." 1 Sam. xvi. 16. 5. A gamester; - SLAYER
One who slays; a killer; a murderer; a destrroyer of life. - UNDERLAYER
A perpendicular shaft sunk to cut the lode at any required depth. Weale. (more info) 1. One who, or that which, underlays or is underlaid; a lower layer. - SOUTERRAIN
A grotto or cavern under ground. Arbuthnot.