Definition of Coremium

1. an organ of certain fungi [n -MIA]

Medical Definition of Coremium

1. A sheaf-like tuft of conidiophores. Origin: G. Korema, filth, refuse (05 Mar 2000)

Lexicographical Neighbors of Coremium

coreign
coreigns
corelate
corelated
corelates
corelating
coreless
corelet
corelets
coreligionist
coreligionists
corella
corellas
corelysis
coremia
coremium (current term)
coreoplasty
coreopses
coreopsis
coreopsises
corepexy
corepraxy
corepresentation
corepresentations
corepression
corepressor
corepressors
corequisite
corequisites
corer

Literary usage of Coremium

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Household Bacteriology for Students in Domestic Sciences by Estelle Denis Buchanan, Robert Earle Buchanan (1913)
"coremium with conidia. (Adapted from Saccardo.) FIG. 341. ... a, coremium. 6, detail of tip showing conidiophores and conidia. (Adapted from Saccardo.) FIG. ..."

2. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1869)
"and also coremium, a luxuriant and fasciculated form of ... and the results were in all cases the same: -ie, production of penicillum, coremium, ..."

3. A Text-book of Mycology and Plant Pathology by John William Harshberger (1917)
"... solution at the margin of a colony can be used to test acidity, or alkalinity. Have the class examine i and 2 for liquefaction; 2 and 4 for coremium amd ..."

4. Bulletin by Bureau of Animal Industry, United States, United States Bureau of Animal Industry, New Hampshire Forestry and Recreation Commission (1909)
"On page 19 of his " Observations " Link describes the genus coremium with a single species, C. glaucum, which ho specifies as found upon decaying ..."

5. Phytopathology by American Phytopathological Society (1917)
"The hyphae are continuous, brownish, becoming paler toward the tip and average about 200 n in length. The average thickness of the coremium is ..."

6. The Monthly Microscopical Journal: Transactions of the Royal Microscopical (1870)
"... which was placed in various substrata, and compared with healthy blood, the results were in all cases the same, ie production of penicillium, coremium, ..."

7. A General System of Botany Descriptive and Analytical: In Two Parts by Emmanuel Le Maout, Joseph Decaisne, Joseph Dalton Hooker (1876)
"... most common Mould; it is found on all animal or vegetable substances when they begin to decay, only needing moisture to induce its development. coremium ..."

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