WordNet
n. a mold of the genus Rhizopus [syn: Rhizopus nigricans]
Usage examples of "bread mold".
Still, 1 knew one thing she had not-thc manifold virtues of that smallest of plants, the lowly bread mold.
I also should have thought of something that Rupen recently broached: primitivewell, primitive in my time on my old world, at leastantibiotics were compounded of the same chemicals as are found in wheat-bread mold, and God knows there is more than enough of that always around in this world.
The same trick worked on anything, and she spent many days examining flies' eyes, bread mold, and blood cells that she got out of her own body by pricking her finger.
The same trick worked on anything, andspent many days examining flies' eyes, bread mold, and bloodthat she got out of her own body by pricking her finger.
Whenever she stoppedrest, she could look out across the burnt desert she hadcrossed: a tawny plain scabbed with reddish-brownrock, patches of aromatic greenish-gray shrubslike bread mold to any parts that were sheltered frometernal wind.
The longshore swamp smelled of rot, and the overcast rolled low and threatening over air that shimmered with heat and moisture, over oil-smooth sea the color of grey bread mold.
I have cut away as much tissue as I dare, and treated the rot with boiling wine and bread mold, to no avail.
An unintended byproduct of the environment itself Like bread mold.
Nearby, tiny white flowers grew out of lumps of fine grass resembling bread mold.
Even in the dark, I could see that the house was stained a sun-drained blue, like bread mold, the same color as this Allison/Cecilia woman's car.