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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Flagella

Flagellum \Fla*gel"lum\, n.; pl. E. Flagellums, L. Flagella.

  1. (Bot.) A young, flexible shoot of a plant; esp., the long trailing branch of a vine, or a slender branch in certain mosses.

  2. (Zo["o]l.)

    1. A long, whiplike cilium. See Flagellata.

    2. An appendage of the reproductive apparatus of the snail.

    3. A lashlike appendage of a crustacean, esp. the terminal ortion of the antenn[ae] and the epipodite of the maxilipeds. See Maxilliped.

Wiktionary
flagella

n. (plural of flagellum English)

WordNet
flagellum
  1. n. a whip used to inflict punishment (often used for pedantic humor) [syn: scourge]

  2. a lash-like appendage used for locomotion (e.g., in sperm cells and some bacteria and protozoa)

  3. [also: flagella (pl)]

flagella

See flagellum

Usage examples of "flagella".

Each was no larger than a grain of true sand, with legs or flagella so small he could only guess that they existed.

The flagella that let bacterium swim work by an arrangement which looks much like a motor, each proton extruded by the motor turns the assembly a small bit of a full rotation.

All my manipulators and flagella have gone to that big moravec heaven in the sky.

In the early years, it would often thrash about arid make motions with its flagella, but the waiting tape recorders heard no sound that could be deciphered.

I suspect in early Centauri lifeforms, the four limbs were undifferentiated, and were all used for locomotionas flagella in aquatic forms, and as legs in land-dwelling ones.

I had estimated that original monster as perhaps ten klicks long -- these zeplinlike work beasts must have been several hundred klicks long, perhaps longer when one factored in the countless tentacles, tendrils, flagella, whips, tails, probes, and proboscises the things sported.