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capsule |
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capsuleIn botany, a dry, usually many-seeded fruit formed from an ovary composed of two or more fused carpels, which splits open to release the seeds. The same term is used for the spore-containing structure of mosses and liverworts; this is borne at the top of a long stalk or seta. Capsules burst open (dehisce) in various ways, including lengthwise, by a transverse lid – for example, scarlet pimpernel Anagallis arvensis – or by a number of pores, either towards the top of the capsule, as in the poppy Papaver, or near the base, as in certain species of bellflower Campanula. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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Of special note is the Dedication followed by the ;memorial feature 'Remembering Neil' which capsulizes the beginning years of the development of computer technology as applied to astrology. Citrin, a co-author of last year's Lessons from the Top, a study of business leaders, writes smoothly and persuasively; and the companies he chooses effectively capsulize his arguments. By terming them light infantry soldiers (les voltigeurs) the author capsulizes both their relatively modest status and the active role which distinguished them from the ronds de cuir, the presumably do-nothing, office-bound bureaucrats satirized by contemporaries. |
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