percine
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin perca (“perch”) + -ine.
Adjective
[edit]percine (not comparable)
- (rare, obsolete) Resembling a perch (the fish).
- 1885, William Alexander Forbes, “The Last Journal of W.A. Forbes”, in The Collected Scientific Papers of the Late William Alexander Forbes[1], R.H. Porter, page 468:
- Got two fine Malapterursus and a Percine form from the natives.
Noun
[edit]percine (plural percines)
- (rare) A fish in the genus Perca.
- 1867, United States Dept. of Agriculture, “Economical American Freshwater Fishes”, in Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture for 1866[2], Washington: Government Printing Office, page 405:
- The Percines, or typical perches, are recognizable by the elongated form of the body, and the numerous spines of the first or spinous dorsal fin
- (biochemistry) A protamine found in the sperm of yellow perch Perca flavescens
- 2012, Christoph Scholtissek with B.M. Richards, R. Vendrely, C. Vendrely, and D.P. Bloch, Chemistry and Cytochemistry of Nucleic Acids and Nuclear Proteins, Springer, →ISBN, page 16:
- An other type of diprotamine contains arginine and histidine: the percine [from the perch, Perca flavescens] belongs to this group.