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单词 mulberry
释义

mulberryn.adj.

Brit. /ˈmʌlb(ə)ri/, U.S. /ˈməlˌbɛri/
Forms:

α. Middle English murberie, Middle English–1500s morberie, Middle English–1500s morbery, 1500s more berry, 1500s more bery.

β. Middle English molberi, Middle English molbury, Middle English moolbery, Middle English mulbere, Middle English mylbery, Middle English–1500s molbery, Middle English–1500s molberye, Middle English–1600s mulberie, Middle English–1600s mulbery, 1500s moulberie, 1500s moulbery, 1500s mulbry, 1500s mulbuy, 1500s– mulberry, 1600s molberry, 1600s mulberrie, 1600s mulberrye, 1600s mulburie.

Origin: Probably a borrowing from Middle Low German. Etymon: Middle Low German mūlbēre.
Etymology: Probably < Middle Low German mūlbēre (Old Saxon mūlberi ), cognate with Old High German mūlberi (Middle High German mūlbere , German Maulbeere ) < a variant (probably dissimilated, although compare Old Saxon mūlbōm , Old High German mūlboum mulberry tree) of the base of Dutch moerbezie , Middle Low German mōrbēre , mūrbēre , Old High German mūrberi , mōrberi , ultimately < classical Latin mōrum mulberry (see more n.2) + the Germanic base of berry n.1The α. forms probably never had any real currency, and are unlikely to have any immediate connection with earlier (Old English) more-berry n. at more n.2 Compounds. Mur- in the form murberien in quot. a1300 at sense A. 1aα. is probably < Anglo-Norman and Old French mur , mure mulberry, blackberry (c1240; French mûre ), altered form of moure (12th cent.) < post-classical Latin mora , feminine singular (4th cent.), reinterpretation of classical Latin mōra , plural of mōrum (see more n.2); murer in the same quot. is probably after Anglo-Norman and Old French murier , morer , variants of morier mulberry tree. The form morberies in Caxton (see quot. 1480 at sense A. 1bα. ) is after Dutch moerbezie; and the 16th cent. instances (see quot. 1548 at sense A. 1bα. , and quot. ?1533 at mulberry tree n.) are probably pedantic corrections of mulbery after Latin mōrum.
A. n.
1.
a. Any of various mostly tropical and subtropical trees composing the genus Morus (family Moraceae), native to Asia, North and South America, and Africa and characterized by flowers in male or female catkins and typically cordate leaves; esp. (more fully black or common mulberry) M. nigra, with flavourful purple fruit, and (more fully white mulberry) M. alba, with insipid white fruit, both of which have been cultivated for many centuries, the former chiefly for its fruit, the latter as a food plant for silkworms. Also with distinguishing word. Cf. mulberry tree n.Mexican, red, white mulberry: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > berry-bush or -tree > [noun] > mulberry bush
moreeOE
mulberrya1300
mulberry treec1350
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > edible berries > mulberry
mulberrya1300
mulberry bush1842
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > tree or plant producing edible berries > mulberry bush
moreeOE
mulberrya1300
mulberry treec1350
α.
a1300 in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 557 Celsi, murer, murberien.
β. a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) 2 Paralip. i. 15 Þe kyng ȝaf in to ierusalem..cedres as longe mulberies [L. sycomoros].c1450 (?c1408) J. Lydgate Reson & Sensuallyte (1901) 3954 (MED) The Molberye, Whos fruit was turned to blaknesse.1577 B. Googe tr. C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husbandry ii. f. 92 When so euer you see the Mulbery begin to spring, you may be sure that winter is at an end.1616 J. Smith Descr. New Eng. 29 Ash, elme, cypresse..mulberrie..and many other sorts.1617 S. Purchas Pilgrimage (ed. 3) 588 Vines, which they plant at the foot of the Mulberrie, the same Tree seeming to beare two Fruits.1673 J. Ray Observ. Journey Low-countries Catal. 74 Morus alba... The white Mulberry.1775 J. Adair Hist. Amer. Indians 360 We must not omit the black mulberry-tree.1785 T. Martyn tr. J.-J. Rousseau Lett. Elements Bot. xxviii. 436 Black Mulberry has rugged, heart-shaped leaves.1819 D. B. Warden Acct. U.S. I. 185 Red mulberry, Morus rubra.1830 Lady Morgan France 1829–30 I. 521 He..planted the gardens of the Tuileries with mulberries.1882 Garden 23 Dec. 545/2 The common Mulberry is a native of Italy, but has been grown in this country for more than 300 years.1910 Yearbk. U.S. Dept. Agric. 1909 193 Foremost in attractiveness to birds among cultivated fruit-bearing plants are mulberries.1948 G. D. H. Bell Cultivated Plants Farm xvii. 167 The botanical order Urticales..includes other useful cultivated plants of such diverse kind as the hemp, mulberry, fig, [etc.].1987 K. Rushforth Tree Planting & Managem. (1990) 185/1 White mulberry..This tree is the principal one fed to silkworms in silk production but is less satisfactory in Britain than Black mulberry.1991 Garden (Royal Hort. Soc.) Apr. 187/1 The path opens out into a lawn with a vast catalpa and a sadly storm-torn mulberry of great age.
b. The collective fruit (syncarp) of a tree or shrub of the genus Morus, developed from a female inflorescence in which the individual flowers have become enlarged and fleshy; esp. the luscious fruit of the black mulberry, crimson-black when ripe and somewhat resembling a raspberry in appearance.
ΘΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > berry > [noun] > mulberry
mulberryc1350
α.
1480 Table Prouffytable Lernynge (Caxton) (1964) 12 Cheryes sloes Morberies strawberies.
1548 W. Turner Names of Herbes sig. A.vv A litle blacke bery lyke a blacke morbery.
β. c1350 Nominale (Cambr. Ee.4.20) in Trans. Philol. Soc. (1906) 21* Cromsile nugage et glasie, Theuthorne and mulbere.1381 Diuersa Servicia in C. B. Hieatt & S. Butler Curye on Inglysch (1985) 69 For to make murrey, tak mulbery & bray hem in a morter.a1425 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (Pierpont Morgan) xvii. i In some tren and herbes frute ripeþ sone, as mulberies [1535 moulberyes].a1450 in T. Austin Two 15th-cent. Cookery-bks. (1888) 28 (MED) Murreye. Take Molberys, & wryng hem þorwe a cloþe.1535 Bible (Coverdale) Amos vii. C Now as I was breakynge downe molberies.1562 W. Turner 2nd Pt. Herball f. 58 The iuice of the rype mulberries is a good mouth medicine.1594 W. Shakespeare Venus & Adonis (new ed.) sig. Giiij Some other in their bils Would bring him mulberies & ripe-red cherries.1662 S. Pepys Diary 2 Aug. (1970) III. 152 I eat, among other fruit, much mulberrys.1718 J. Quincy Pharmacopœia Officinalis 100 Mulberries are grateful, cooling, and astringent.1737 J. Wesley Jrnl. 2 Dec. (1910) I. 402 The white mulberry is not good to eat.1851 H. Melville Moby-Dick cxxxiii. 607 The sight of the splintered boat seemed to madden him, as the blood of grapes and mulberries cast before Antiochus's elephants in the book of Maccabees.1907 Daily News 5 Sept. 4 In a good season ripe mulberries may be plucked within fifty yards of Fleet-street.1913 W. Cather O Pioneers! iv. viii. 268 The white mulberries that had fallen in the night..were covered with dark stain.1963 A. L. Simon Guide Good Food & Wines 281/2 Mulberries may be eaten raw, with sugar, or else cooked..in pies, puddings and tarts.1990 K. Frank Chainless Soul: Life E. Brontë ii. 55 The natural world breathed life and warmth and promises of rich red mulberries and blackcurrants in the months to come.
2. Any of various fruits or plants of other genera; esp. (British regional) a blackberry; (U.S.) a raspberry. Also with distinguishing word.cloth-, paper-mulberry: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > tree or plant producing edible berries > raspberry bush
raspis-bush?1533
raspis tree?1533
raspis-berry1534
raspis1542
rasp1573
raspberry1605
frambousiera1648
mulberry1672
raspberry bush1695
raspberry tree1704
1672 J. Josselyn New-Englands Rarities 93 Raspberry, here called Mulberry.
1832 W. D. Williamson Hist. Maine I. 114 High bush Blackberry is sometimes called ‘Mulberry’.
1848 Rural Cycl. II. 313/1 Flax-dodder—botanically Cuscuta Epilinum..is popularly known in Somersetshire as ‘the mulberry’.
1866 J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. Mulberry, Australian, Hedycarya Pseudo-Morus. Indian Mulberry, Morinda citrifolia. New Zealand Mulberry, Entelea arborescens.
1880 J. Britten & R. Holland Dict. Eng. Plant-names Mulberry..(2) Rubus fruticosus L.—Norf... (4) Pyrus Aria. L.—Aberdeensh.
1898 N. L. Britton & A. Brown Illustr. Flora Northern U.S. III. 74 French mulberry, Callicarpa Americana.
1913 N. L. Britton & A. Brown Illustr. Flora Northern U.S. (ed. 2) II. 276 Rubus odoratus. Purple-flowering Raspberry. Thimble-berry... Scotch caps. Mulberry.
1936 J. W. Audas Native Trees Austral. 229 Litsea dealbata... A well-known tree of Queensland and New South Wales called Native Mulberry or Pigeon-Berry Tree.
1970 G. E. Evans Where Beards wag All xv. 165 It is true that a certain species of bramble has bigger fruit than the average blackberry and that some East Anglians even today call this variety the mulberry.
3. The dark red or purple colour of the fruit of the black mulberry.
ΘΠ
the world > matter > colour > named colours > purple or purpleness > [noun] > other purples
amarant1690
plum colour1714
mulberry colour1776
plum1873
Babylonian1882
heliotrope1882
mulberry1882
helio1894
aubergine1895
orchid1923
1882 Garden 21 Oct. 354/3 Among other seedlings the following struck us as being remarkably fine..Darkness, deep mulberry.
1928 Garden & Home Builder Jan. 425/1 The glass curtains are of ruffled net with flowered chintz over-draperies of rose, green, mulberry, and blue.
1971 Vogue 15 Oct. 41 (advt.) Pullover..in Antwerp Brown, French Navy and Mulberry.
1995 R. Kelly Red Actions 372 They dawdled so beautifully by the shallow river In soft clothes faded mulberry, pistachio, rainwater white.
4. [ < Mulberry, the name of a ship (see quot. 1945).] Originally (as a code name): the prefabricated harbour used in the invasion of continental Europe by the Allied forces in 1944. Now also: any artificial, usually prefabricated, harbour. More fully Mulberry harbour. Frequently attributive.
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society > travel > travel by water > berthing, mooring, or anchoring > harbour or port > [noun] > floating harbour > specific
mulberry1945
1945 Notes & Queries 15 Dec. 263/2 The word ‘Mulberry’ was selected as the secret name for the artificial harbour..from its being that which happened to come next in rotation on the Admiralty's List of Ships' Names then available for use.
1958 Listener 5 June 930/2 Further north—in the island of Schouwen-Duiveland—I saw where it had been necessary to float great mulberry harbour caissons in and sink them in the gaps.
1965 R. B. Oram Cargo Handling viii. 152 Movable quays of the war time Mulberry pattern.
1972 Daily Tel. 11 May 9/3 Vice-Adml Hughes-Hallett told me he..frankly considered the ‘embellishments’ of the Mulberries quite superfluous.
1988 E. Wood et al. Sea Life Brit. & Ireland 93 Relics of the Second World War include several concrete ‘Mulberry Harbour’ units in the Bognor area.
B. adj.
Of the dark red or purple colour of the fruit of the black mulberry.
ΘΠ
the world > matter > colour > named colours > purple or purpleness > [adjective] > other purples
mulberry-coloured1787
plum-coloured1799
mulberry1803
amaranthine1808
mauve1833
mauve-colour1859
mauve-coloured1860
mauvish1876
pontifical1880
plummy1885
plum1887
petunia1892
palatinate1893
1803 G. Colman John Bull i. i. 3 A waddling woman, wi' a mulberry face.
1837 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers xxv. 261 If ever there was a wolf in a mulberry suit, that ere Job Trotter's him.
1951 M. Kennedy Lucy Carmichael i. i. 10 I impressed her with my mulberry house-coat.
1974 R. Harris Double Snare xii. 83 Sir Jonathan wore a white doublet, and mulberry trunk hose.
1994 R. Pybus Flying Blues 71 Her skin was almond in its lightest parts, grew darker into oiled-with-love mulberry blackness.

Compounds

C1.
a.
mulberry colour n.
ΘΠ
the world > matter > colour > named colours > purple or purpleness > [noun] > other purples
amarant1690
plum colour1714
mulberry colour1776
plum1873
Babylonian1882
heliotrope1882
mulberry1882
helio1894
aubergine1895
orchid1923
1776 Pennsylvania Gaz. 4 Sept. 4/1 (advt.) A flea-bitten grey Mare, 8 or 9 years old, paces and trots, about 15 hands high, she has a spot about the bigness of a dollar on her off thigh near a mulberry colour, neither brand nor ear-mark.
1870 J. Yeats Nat. Hist. Commerce 344 The cochineal insect is small, rugose, and of a deep mulberry colour.
1944 Science 14 Apr. 308 Acid-fast organisms were red, non-acid-fast forms were blue, partially acid-fast forms mulberry color.
2000 Irish Times (Electronic ed.) 9 Nov. A diningroom across the hall is painted a rich mulberry colour and has an old castiron fireplace.
mulberry fruit n.
Π
1561 B. Googe tr. ‘M. Palingenius’ Zodiake of Life (new ed.) iv. sig. Hvii Mulbry frute, While yet no blacke they weare.
1923 M. M. Boyd Silver Wands 23 I waited, and stored in my basket of green leaves All of the mulberry fruit that you dropped through the branches upon me.
2000 Observer (Electronic ed.) 16 Jan. As you'd expect from a wine produced in the very good 1999 vintage, this is rich and soft and full of sweet plum and mulberry fruit.
mulberry hedge n.
Π
1801 P. De La Bigarre On raising Silk Worms in Trans. Soc. Promotion of Useful Arts (ed. 2) 1 iv. ii. 414 Last March, after the planting a mulberry hedge according to the above directions..we perceived..that the greatest part were putting forth leaves.
1913 W. Cather O Pioneers! ii. vi. 134 She led them to the northwest corner of the orchard, sheltered on one side by a thick mulberry hedge and bordered on the other by a wheatfield.
1985 Los Angeles Times 26 Sept. ix. 2/5 A swarm had lit in a neighbor's mulberry hedge.
mulberry leaf n.
Π
1616 G. Markham tr. C. Estienne et al. Maison Rustique (rev. ed.) iii. xlviii. 409 If you lay them [sc. Damaske-plums] betweene mulberrie-leaues, or vine-leaues, one leare aboue another in a close box made for the purpose.
1727–41 E. Chambers Cycl. at Silk In this state it feeds on mulberry-leaves.
1836 J. F. Dauls Chinese I. viii. 292 They collect a quantity of the mulberry-leaves, which are devoted to the nourishment of the imperial depôt of silkworms.
1987 T. Lewis in S. Ravenel New Stories from South (1988) 28 I was still thinking about Mrs. Barton and her sticky comments like mulberry leaves with insect eggs sewn inside them.
mulberry wine n.
Π
1707 J. Moore Englands Interest (title page) How to make..Gooseberry, and Mulberry Wines.
1875 Scribner's Monthly Apr. 766/2 In 1869, a bottle of mulberry wine was dug up from the ruins of the President's cellar.
1999 Bangkok Post (Electronic ed.) 13 Aug. Diplomats who tried mulberry wine during last week's mulberry and silk festival in Roi-et praised the drink as very tasty.
b.
mulberry-coloured adj.
ΘΠ
the world > matter > colour > named colours > purple or purpleness > [adjective] > other purples
mulberry-coloured1787
plum-coloured1799
mulberry1803
amaranthine1808
mauve1833
mauve-colour1859
mauve-coloured1860
mauvish1876
pontifical1880
plummy1885
plum1887
petunia1892
palatinate1893
1787 W. Withering Bot. Arrangem. Brit. Plants (ed. 2) I. 147 Mulberry coloured.
1836 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers (1837) xvi. 161 He was attracted by the appearance of a young fellow in mulberry-coloured livery.
1888 Encycl. Brit. XXIII. 677/1 The eruption which..consists of dark red (mulberry coloured) spots or blotches varying in size.
1932 A. Huxley Brave New World iv. 74 Like aphides and ants, the leaf-green Gamma girls, the black semi-Morons swarmed round the entrances... Mulberry-coloured Beta-Minuses came and went among the crowds.
1986 S. A. Williams Dessa Rose 102 The contrast between his mulberry-colored mouth and the pink areola surrounding her nipple.
mulberry-faced adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > external parts of body > head > face > types of face > [adjective]
flatc1400
hardc1400
low-cheeredc1400
large?a1425
ruscledc1440
well-visagedc1440
platter-faced1533
well-faced1534
full-faced1543
fair-faced1553
bright-faceda1560
crab-faced1563
crab-snouted1563
crab-tree-faced1563
long-visaged1584
owlya1586
wainscot-faced1588
flaberkin1592
rough-hewn1593
angel-faced1594
round-faced1594
crab-favoured1596
rugged1596
weasel-faced1596
rough-faced1598
half-faced1600
chitty1601
lenten-faced1604
broad-faced1607
dog-faced1607
weaselled-faced1607
wry-faced1607
maid-faced1610
warp-faced1611
ill-faceda1616
lean-faceda1616
old-faceda1616
moon-faced1619
monkey-faced1620
chitty-face1622
chitty-faceda1627
lean-chapt1629
antic-faced1635
bloat-faced1638
bacon-facea1640
blue-faced1640
hatchet-faced1648
grave1650
lean-jawed1679
smock-faced1684
lean-visaged1686
flaber1687
baby-faced1692
splatter-faced1707
chubby1722
puggy1722
block-faced1751
haggard-looking1756
long-faced1762
haggardly1763
fresh-faced1766
dough-faced1773
pudding-faced1777
baby-featured1780
fat-faced1782
haggard1787
weazen-face1794
keen1798
ferret-like1801
lean-cheeked1812
mulberry-faced1812
open-faced1813
open-countenanced1819
chiselled1821
hatchety1821
misfeatured1822
terse1824
weazen-faced1824
mahogany-faced1825
clock-faced1827
sharp1832
sensual1833
beef-faced1838
weaselly1838
ferret-faced1840
sensuous1843
rat-faced1844
recedent1849
neat-faced1850
cherubimical1854
pinch-faced1859
cherubic1860
frownya1861
receding1866
weak1882
misfeaturing1885
platopic1885
platyopic1885
pro-opic1885
wind-splitting1890
falcon-face1891
blunt-featured1916
bun-faced1927
fish-faced1963
1812 Sporting Mag. 40 23 A mulberry-faced, bumper-loving blade.
1868 Ld. Tennyson Lucretius 54 The mulberry-faced Dictator's orgies.
mulberry-leaved adj.
Π
1891 New Sydenham Soc. Lexicon at Mulberry Mulberry-leaved booby bark, the bark of Cinchona purpurea.
mulberry-nosed adj.
Π
1924 R. Graves Mock Beggar Hall 6 A dissolute Mulberry-nosed philosopher.
mulberry-red adj. and n.
Π
1890 Bot. Gaz. 15 318 Form No.2..erects into dark raspberry or mulberry red immature sporangia.
1927 Daily Express 14 Mar. 5 Pomegranate, mulberry red, mushroom, and ashes of roses, a colour that looks like blue ash with a touch of flame, are among the fashion reds.
1945 W. de la Mare Scarecrow 35 His large mulberry-red face and eyes like bits of agate.
1999 Horticulture (Electronic ed.) 1 June A small, mulberry-red spot, like a beauty mark, often appears at the leaf axils [of sweet peas].
C2.
mulberry-bird adj. and n. (a) Australian the figbird, Sphecotheres viridis, a fruit-eating bird of the oriole family; (b) the rose-coloured starling, Sturnus roseus (obsolete rare).Sense (b) is apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > larger song birds > [noun] > family Oriolidae > genus Oriolus (oriole) > other types of
commander1812
mango-bird1839
mulberry-bird1891
1891 A. J. North in Rec. Austral. Mus. I. 113 It [sc. the Southern Sphecotheres] is fairly common on the Tweed River, where it is locally known as the ‘Mulberry-bird’, from the decided preference it evinces for that species of fruit.
1895 I. K. Funk et al. Standard Dict. Eng. Lang. II. Mulberry-bird, the rose-colored pastor.
1966 N. W. Cayley What Bird is That? (ed. 4) 21 Southern Figbird... Also called Mulberry-bird and Banana-bird... Flocks may be seen feeding in native fruit- and berry-bearing trees, and sometimes in orchards, where they eat mulberries, figs, and other soft fruits.
mulberry blight n. a disease of the mulberry caused by the bacterium Pseudomonas mori; mulberry bacterial leaf spot.
ΚΠ
1912 E. F. Smith in Phytopathol. 2 175 Those readers who have kept abreast of the literature of the bacterial mulberry blight will recall that..I have used Boyer and Lambert's name Bacterium mori.
1924 Ann. Appl. Biol. 11 169 (title) The mulberry blight in Britain.
1986 Jrnl. Econ. Hist. 46 559 The first [silk boom in the U.S.] was tied to experiments in sericulture that came to a ruinous end in the mulberry blight of the 1840s.
mulberry blite n. (also mulberry blight) Obsolete either of two species of goosefoot, Chenopodium capitatum and C. foliosum, with calyces which turn red, succulent, and berry-like in fruit, grown as pot-herbs and for ornament; cf. strawberry blite n. at strawberry n. Compounds 3a.
Π
1731 P. Miller Gardeners Dict. (ed. 2) at Chenopodio Morus Mulberry-Blite... The whole Plant hath the appearance of a Blite; but the fruit is succulent, and in Shape like a Mulberry or Strawberry.
1796 C. Marshall Gardening (1813) xix. 350 Mulberry blight, or more properly blite..whose fruit resembles a red unripe mulberry.
1857 R. G. Mayne Expos. Lexicon Med. Sci. (1860) Mulberry Blight, common name for the Chenopodio-morus, or Blitum capitatum of Linn.
mulberry body n. Embryology Obsolete rare = morula n. 2a.Apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
ΚΠ
1892 New Sydenham Soc. Lexicon at Mulberry Mulberry body, a term for the Morula, or mass of cells formed by the segmentation of the yolk of an impregnated ovum.
mulberry calculus n. Medicine (now rare) a mulberry-shaped calcium oxalate urolith; (also) a mulberry-shaped gallstone.
ΚΠ
1765 T. Short Gen. Treat. Cold Min. Waters 231 Those of the mulberry calculus, which had laid long in former mixtures.
1856 R. Druitt Surgeon's Vade Mecum (ed. 7) 572 The Mulberry Calculus is composed of oxalate of lime. It is dark red, rough, and tuberculated.
1993 Clin. Investigator 71 429/2 The primary spheres aggregated to form mulberry calculi.
mulberry eyelid n. Medicine Obsolete a condition characterized by granular swellings of the eyelids; (probably) trachoma.
ΚΠ
1819 Q. Jrnl. Foreign Med. & Surg. 1 403 (note) The sarcomatous state of the lining membrane of the eyelids, described by the Greek writers under the name of Pladarotis, and by old English surgeons under the expressive appellation of the Mulberry-eyelid.
mulberry germ n. Embryology Obsolete = morula n. 2a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > biological processes > procreation or reproduction > reproductive substances or cells > [noun] > ovum or ootid > fertilized ovum and parts
primitive streak1833
mulberry mass1851
morule1857
morula1875
stirp1875
cytula1876
vegetative pole1876
genoblast1877
mulberry germ1879
parent kernel1879
vegetal pole1881
animal pole1882
amphiaster1885
oosperm1888
segmentation sphere1898
1879 tr. E. Haeckel Evol. Man I. 189 We call this mass the mulberry-germ (morula).
mulberry mass n. Embryology (now historical) = morula n. 2a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > biological processes > procreation or reproduction > reproductive substances or cells > [noun] > ovum or ootid > fertilized ovum and parts
primitive streak1833
mulberry mass1851
morule1857
morula1875
stirp1875
cytula1876
vegetative pole1876
genoblast1877
mulberry germ1879
parent kernel1879
vegetal pole1881
animal pole1882
amphiaster1885
oosperm1888
segmentation sphere1898
1851 W. B. Carpenter Man. Physiol. (ed. 2) 473 A large part of its structure having undergone but little change from the state of the ‘mulberry mass’.
1929 Proc. National Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 15 293 The embryonic apparatus is composed of a so-called ‘mulberry mass’.
mulberry molar n. Medicine a first molar tooth with a small, nodular, pitted crown resembling a mulberry, associated chiefly with congenital syphilis.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of internal organs > disorders of mouth > [noun] > disorders of teeth
scale1594
caries1634
tartar1806
odontolith1848
malocclusion1864
pulpitis1869
odontome1870
pericementitis1882
cementoma1893
open bite1893
plaque1898
super-eruption1912
mulberry molar1917
Moon1918
retroclusion1928
bruxism1932
overclosure1934
overeruption1961
1917 Arch. Pediatrics 34 770 The sixth year molar..has been called the ‘honeycombed molar of hereditary syphilis’. We have spoken of it in our clinics as the ‘mulberry molar’, likening the worm-eaten center of the cutting surface to the appearance of the tip of a mulberry.
1941 K. H. Thoma Oral Roentgenol. v. 242 The mulberry molar is covered on the sides with normal, smooth enamel, but the occlusal surface is pinched together, dwarfed, rough, and hypoplastic, often pigmented.
1998 Current Anthropol. 39 264/2 Osseous and dental changes encountered in congenital syphilis such as..mulberry molars, and Hutchinson's incisors.
mulberry rash n. Medicine Obsolete the reddish-purple petechial rash of typhus.
ΚΠ
1850 W. Jenner in Medico-chirurg. Trans. 33 27 Typhus fever—Mulberry rash.
1851 R. Dunglison Med. Lexicon (ed. 8) 879/2 Typhus... A ‘mulberry rash’, appearing on the fifth to the seventh day of the disease.
a1883 C. H. Fagge Princ. & Pract. Med. (1886) I. 140 The roseola in each case faded before the mulberry rash came out.
mulberry shell n. Obsolete rare a marine gastropod of the genus Tonna, having a furrowed, almost spherical shell.
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1753 Chambers's Cycl. Suppl. Mulberry shell.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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