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plant life

n. a living organism lacking the power of locomotion [syn: plant, flora]

Usage examples of "plant life".

How, I wonder, do conventional evolutionists imagine that their primaeval world of pure plant life existed in the absence of all other species?

Like plant life itself, the hydrogen economy would be nonpolluting and self-substaining.

Sax strolled over these pseudo-moraines carefully, as unwilling to step on the plant life as he would be to step on any experiment in the lab.

On dying, they sank to the bottom of the lakes and seas along with the settling dust particles and were gradually buried deep under the endless layers of more dust and more aquatic and plant life that slowly accumulated above them.

To see how simple it was, ask yourself what are the main differences between the higher forms of plant life and the lower forms of animal life.

They adapted and grew and with no competition from other plant life, they developed into what we found.

From the realm of plant life we may take the woody and bark-like formation of the trees as representing the operation of Saturn-forces.

All along he'd felt less and less plant life as roots on the ground overhead reached their limits.

But so was the soil, and with so much of it being put into the air, the plant life was coming up short.

They had only been going at it for sixty years, and already most summer days were reaching temperatures above freezing, allowing arctic and alpine plant life to flourish, as he had seen in the Arena Glacier area.

They arrived at the weed-ridden site once more at twilight, but this time set down a bit further away from the plant life.