acicular

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English

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Acicular leaf.
Anthodites at the Skyline Caverns in Virginia, US. The individual crystals of anthodites develop in an acicular form and often branch out as they grow.

Etymology

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From Latin aciculāris.

Pronunciation

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Adjective

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acicular (not comparable)

  1. Needle-shaped; slender like a needle or bristle.
    • 1992, Oliver Sacks, Migraine, Berkeley: University of California Press, revised and expanded edition, Part 5, Chapter 17, p. 279,[1]
      Sometimes these networks have an acicular or crystalline appearance, and may grow visibly, sometimes with sudden jerks, “like frost on a windowpane,” or “primitive plants.”
  2. Having sharp points like needles.
  3. (botany) Of a leaf, slender and pointed, needle-like.
    the acicular foliage of coniferous trees
    • 1860, John Ruskin, chapter 3, in Modern Painters [], volume V, London: Smith, Elder and Co., [], →OCLC, part VIII (Of Ideas of Relation:—I. Of Invention Formal.), page 189:
      [] though fond of foliage, their trees always had a tendency to congeal into little acicular thorn-hedges, and never tossed free.

Derived terms

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Translations

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Portuguese

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Pronunciation

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Adjective

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acicular m or f (plural aciculares)

  1. acicular (needle-shaped)

Romanian

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Etymology

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Borrowed from French aciculaire.

Adjective

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acicular m or n (feminine singular aciculară, masculine plural aciculari, feminine and neuter plural aciculare)

  1. acicular

Declension

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Spanish

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Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): (Spain) /aθikuˈlaɾ/ [a.θi.kuˈlaɾ]
  • IPA(key): (Latin America) /asikuˈlaɾ/ [a.si.kuˈlaɾ]
  • Rhymes: -aɾ
  • Syllabification: a‧ci‧cu‧lar

Adjective

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acicular m or f (masculine and feminine plural aciculares)

  1. acicular

Further reading

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