multipede
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin multipeda, multipēs;[1] equivalent to multi- + -pede.
Adjective
[edit]multipede (not comparable)
- Having many feet.
Noun
[edit]multipede (plural multipedes)
- A creature with many feet, especially a centipede, millepede or similar creature.
- 1742, Charles Owen, An essay towards a natural history of serpents, page 107:
- XLVI. THE Ambua, ſo the Natives of Brazil call the Millepedes and the Centipedes Serpents. […]
IN theſe Multipedes, the Mechaniſm of the Body is very curious; […]
- 1804, W. Kochs, Experiments with Artificial Propagation of Minute Crustaceans, published in the Bulletin of the Bureau of Fisheries, volume 14, page 307:
- In the course of two weeks there developed in all the aquaria minute crustaceans (shell insects, flea lobsters, water multipedes, infusoria, green algae), a felted mass […]
- 1832, William Percivall, The anatomy of the horse, embracing the structure of the foot, page 418:
- Animals exhibit differences in the number of their feet, and accordingly have been distributed into classes, consisting of bipeds, quadrupeds, and multipedes.
- A branching structure with many separate termini.
- 2006, Bertrand Donnio, Akira Harada, Akihito Hashidzume, editors, Supramolecular polymers, polymeric betains, oligomers:
- The stability of the mesophases for the polypedes and multipedes is reported in Table 17.
- 2011, Takashi Nakanishi, Supramolecular Soft Matter: Applications in Materials and Organic Electronics, page 314:
- As noted in Section 15.1, the design of multipedes allows the incorporation of functional moieties into self-assembling and/or self-organizing states of matter.
References
[edit]- ^ “multiped, n. and adj.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.