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drosera

American  
[dros-er-uh] / ˈdrɒs ər ə /

noun

  1. any of several insectivorous plants of the genus Drosera, having leaves covered with sticky hairs, comprising the sundews.


Etymology

Origin of drosera

< New Latin (Linnaeus), the genus name < Greek droserá, feminine of droserós dewy, equivalent to drós ( os ) dew + -eros adj. suffix

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Harel posits biophilia as the root of Darwin's genius and the influence behind everything from his love of dogs and fascination with the insect-eating Drosera plant to his rejection of mind-body dualism and his sense that estimations of the earth's age would one day align with the time span of evolution.

From Scientific American

He said he cared more about the genus Drosera, which means dewy in Latin, than the origin of all the species in the world.

From BBC

The researchers investigated how two sundew species, Drosera makinoi and Drosera toyoakensis, attract prey.

From National Geographic

As they report in Plant Species Biology, the petals of Drosera tokaiensis and Drosera spatulate fold up within two to 10 minutes after parts of their stem, calyx, or closed flowers are pressed with tweezers.

From National Geographic

In his work on the carnivorous sundew plant Drosera rotundifolia, for instance, he generated several predictions to test his hypothesis that it trapped insects to obtain nitrogen.

From Nature