Home
3D
Stylish English
Comic Cartoon
Curly
Decorative
Dingbats
Dotted
Famous
Fire
Gothic
Groovy
Handwriting
Headline
more
Horror
Ice Snow
Modern
Outline
Russian
Sci Fi
Script
Valentine
Alien
Animals
Army Stencil
Asian
Bitmap Pixel
Black Letter
Blurred
Brush
Celtic Irish
Chalk Crayon
Christmas
Computer
Disney
Distorted
Easter
Fantasy
Fixed Width
Graffiti
Greek Roman
Halloween
Italic
LCD
Medieval
Mexican
Movies Tv
Old English
Old School
Pointed
Retro
Rock Stone
Rounded
School
Scratched
Serif
Square
Trash
Typewriter
USA
Various
Western
English to English Dictionary ⇛
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Definition of node
Thanks for using this online dictionary, we have been helping millions of people improve their use of the english language with its free online services. English definition of node is as below...
Node (n.) The joint of a stem, or the part where a leaf or
several
leaves
are
inserted..
Lern More About Node
☛ Wiki Definition of Node
☛ Wiki Article of Node
☛ Google Meaning of Node
☛ Google Search for Node
Ambulacrum
::
Ambulacrum
(n.) One of the
radical
zones of
echinoderms,
along which run the
principal
nerves,
blood
vessels,
and water
tubes.
These zones
usually
bear rows of
locomotive
suckers
or
tentacles,
which
protrude
from
regular
pores.
In star
fishes
they
occupy
the
grooves
along the under side of the
rays..
Enode
::
Enode (v. t.) To clear of
knots;
to make
clear.
Nodosity
::
Nodosity
(n.) A knot; a node.
Anthophore
::
Anthophore
(n.) The stipe when
developed
into an
internode
between
calyx and
corolla,
as in the Pink
family..
Node
::
Node (n.) The knot,
intrigue,
or plot of a
piece..
Anelectrotonus
::
Anelectrotonus
(n.) The
condition
of
decreased
irritability
of a nerve in the
region
of the
positive
electrode
or anode on the
passage
of a
current
of
electricity
through
it.
Echinodermata
::
Echinodermata
(n. pl.) One of the grand
divisions
of the
animal
kingdom.
By many
writers
it was
formerly
included
in the
Radiata.
Node
::
Node (n.) One of the fixed
points
of a
sonorous
string,
when it
vibrates
by
aliquot
parts,
and
produces
the
harmonic
tones;
nodal line or
point..
Node
::
Node (n.) The point at which a curve
crosses
itself,
being a
double
point of the
curve.
See
Crunode,
and
Acnode..
Nodulous
::
Nodulous
(a.)
Having
small nodes or
knots;
diminutively
nodose.
Ossicle
::
Ossicle
(n.) One of
numerous
small
calcareous
structures
forming
the
skeleton
of
certain
echinoderms,
as the
starfishes..
Bivium
::
Bivium
(n.) One side of an
echinoderm,
including
a pair of
ambulacra,
in
distinction
from the
opposite
side
(trivium),
which
includes
three
ambulacra..
Cathode
::
Cathode
(n.) The part of a
voltaic
battery
by which the
electric
current
leaves
substances
through
which it
passes,
or the
surface
at which the
electric
current
passes
out of the
electrolyte;
the
negative
pole; --
opposed
to
anode..
Asteridea
::
Asteridea
(n. pl.) A class of
Echinodermata
including
the true
starfishes.
The rays vary in
number
and
always
have
ambulacral
grooves
below.
The body is
star-shaped
or
pentagonal.
Interambulacrum
::
Interambulacrum
(n.) In
echinoderms,
one of the areas or zones
intervening
between
two
ambulacra.
See
Illust.
of
Ambulacrum..
Phalanx
::
Phalanx
(n.) One of the
digital
bones of the hand or foot,
beyond
the
metacarpus
or
metatarsus;
an
internode..
Sea Urchin
::
Sea
urchin
() Any one of
numerous
species
of
echinoderms
of the order
Echinoidea.
Asterias
::
Asterias
(n.) A genus of
echinoderms.
Revolution
::
Revolution
(n.) The
motion
of any body, as a
planet
or
satellite,
in a
curved
line or
orbit,
until it
returns
to the same point
again,
or to a point
relatively
the same; --
designated
as the
annual,
anomalistic,
nodical,
sidereal,
or
tropical
revolution,
according
as the point of
return
or
completion
has a fixed
relation
to the year, the
anomaly,
the
nodes,
the
stars,
or the
tropics;
as, the
revolution
of the earth about the sun; the
revolution
of the moon about the
earth..
Sublapsarian
::
Subkingdom
(n.) One of the
several
primary
divisions
of
either
the
animal,
or
vegetable
kingdom,
as, in
zoology,
the
Vertebrata,
Tunicata,
Mollusca,
Articulata,
Molluscoidea,
Echinodermata,
Coelentera,
and the
Protozoa;
in
botany,
the
Phanerogamia,
and the
Cryptogamia..
Random Fonts
Most Popular
Privacy Policy
GDPR Policy
Terms & Conditions
Contact Us