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carpel

[ kahr-puhl ]

noun

, Botany.
  1. a simple pistil, or a single member of a compound pistil.


carpel

/ ˈkɑːpɪˌleɪt; ˈkɑːpəl /

noun

  1. the female reproductive organ of flowering plants, consisting of an ovary, style (sometimes absent), and stigma. The carpels are separate or fused to form a single pistil


carpel

/ kärpəl /

  1. One of the individual female reproductive organs in a flower. A carpel is composed of an ovary, a style, and a stigma, although some flowers have carpels without a distinct style. In origin, carpels are leaves (megasporophylls) that have evolved to enclose the ovules. The term pistil is sometimes used to refer to a single carpel or to several carpels fused together.
  2. See more at flower


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Derived Forms

  • carpellate, adjective
  • ˈcarpellary, adjective

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Other Words From

  • car·pel·lar·y [kahr, -p, uh, -ler-ee], adjective
  • inter·carpel·lary adjective

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Word History and Origins

Origin of carpel1

1810–20; < New Latin carpellum, equivalent to Greek karp ( ós ) fruit + Latin -ellum diminutive suffix

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Word History and Origins

Origin of carpel1

C19: from New Latin carpellum, from Greek karpos fruit

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Compare Meanings

How does carpel compare to similar and commonly confused words? Explore the most common comparisons:

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Example Sentences

A pod-like fruit composed of a solitary carpel and usually splitting open by both sutures (Leguminosae).

The follicle is a dry unilocular many-seeded fruit, formed from one carpel and dehiscing by the ventral suture.

From the back of each carpel grows a wing, converting the fruit into two 1-seeded, at length separable samaras or keys.

Also, instead of a perigynous disk, there are usually little scales on the receptacle, one behind each carpel.

A dry dehiscent fruit composed of more than one carpel; the spore-case of Hepatic, etc.

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carpe diemcarpellate