cocooned
Appearance
English
[edit]Adjective
[edit]cocooned
- Enclosed in a cocoon.
- 1910, United States. Bureau of Entomology, Bulletin:
- As previously stated, the true hibernating form of the midge is the "cocooned larva."
- 1951, Ghulam-Ullah Chaudhry, The Development and Fecundity of the Oriental Fruit Moth, page 76:
- A low humidity of 35%, on the whole was highly injurious to the development and viability of cocooned larvae.
- 1973, John N. All, Mechanism of Preferential Feeding by Jeodiprion Swainei Middleton and Neodiprion Rugifrons Middleton on Pinus Banksiana Lambert, page 65:
- values derived as mean of measurements taken on 47 cocooned female larvae reared on new foliage and 26 cocooned female larvae reared on mature foliage.
- Isolated, especially in an environment that limits interaction with whatever is outside it.
- 1981, Victor J. Stenger, Dumand-80, page 194:
- A young black hole formed in the center of galaxy can develop into the cocooned black hole or, as extreme possibility, into a magnetoid with a black hole inside.
- 2013, R. Heppner, The Lost Leaders: How Corporate America Loses Women Leaders:
- That was a very big eye-opener for me, after being very cocooned, living most of my life in the city where I was born and raised.
- 2016, Tamler Sommers, A Very Bad Wizard: Morality Behind the Curtain:
- So we all expected a fairly open and informative visit. But it was very cocooned.
- 2017, Steve Richards, The Rise of the Outsiders: How Mainstream Politics Lost its Way:
- And yet, as the coverage became more relentless, she chose to become more cocooned.
- 2018, Michele Meek, Independent Female Filmmakers:
- It was a very cocooned environment, in a way, and I could write and get a lot of feedback.
- Stored in an inactive state; mothballed.
- 1947, “Cocooned Hosiery Machines”, in The Grace Log, volumes 22-25, page 17:
- The cocooned machinery in its case being hoisted aboard Grace Line's Santa Ana.
- 1957, North America Skyline - Volumes 15-18, page 28:
- Towed from the paint spray hangar, the plane joins other cocooned aircraft at McClellan's storage area preparatory to a convoy along State highways from McClellan to Government loading docks on the Sacramento River, 15 miles away.
- 2018, Charles Woodley, Flying Boats: Air Travel in the Golden Age, page 1943:
- The three airframes were to remain cocooned and awaiting their uncertain future until the mid 1960s, when all three of them were finally broken up.
Derived terms
[edit]Verb
[edit]cocooned
- simple past and past participle of cocoon