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单词 limpet
释义

Definition of limpet in English:

limpet

noun ˈlɪmpɪtˈlɪmpɪt
  • 1A marine mollusc which has a shallow conical shell and a broad muscular foot, found clinging tightly to rocks.

    䗩,帽贝

    Patellidae, Fissurellidae (the keyhole limpets), and other families, class Gastropoda: numerous species, including the common limpet (Patella vulgata)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Brains of limpets and abalones are much simpler than brains of garden snails and slugs in histological differentiation.
    • Some species of limpets have been shown to spend their entire lives within a few cm of their home scars, while others can move upwards of 1 m during a single tidal cycle.
    • The shape of a limpet's shell has a great deal to do with whether the animal remains securely attached to its rock or is ripped off and thrown onto dry land or into the waiting tentacles of a hungry sea anemone.
    • Two thirds along things change, there are some scattered rocks covered in barnacles, limpets, mussels and seaweed.
    • It seems that as limpets creep across rocks, eating algae, they also eat chalk.
    • The ‘lock-and-key’ fit of homing limpets may have more to do with resistance to dislodgment than with desiccation.
    • In particular, they noted that modem patelloid limpets have segmented scars due to bundling of the large retractor muscle.
    • Slipper limpets have also made their way across the Atlantic, taking over areas off the coast of the British Isles and Northern Europe.
    • There is a gap of several tens of millions of years between the Middle Permian when the last Metoptomatids lived, and the Middle Triassic when the true limpets appear.
    • In coastal areas, they eat mussels, barnacles, and limpets.
    • Many of the taxa that apparently diverged in the Paleozoic now are limpets and retain little information about the morphologies of their coiled ancestors.
    • While Pisaster has a very broad diet that includes barnacles, limpets, snails, and chitons, mussels are its preferred prey.
    • Entering the water from the shore, the first animal we spot may well be a mollusc such as a limpet or dog-whelk.
    • Modern species thrive under intense herbivory from snails, chitons, and limpets, and this has been suggested as one reason for their success.
    • Secondary gills are found in Ancylids, which are freshwater limpets adapted to life in fast-flowing streams.
    • Two species of limpets, previously unrecorded for the West Point area, have also been found during this study.
    • Lottiid and especially fissurelid limpets, neither of which feed predominately on macroalgae, also have given rise to large-bodied taxa in certain temperate oceans.
    • The sand was dotted with saucer - sized jellyfish, rocks and pools are squidgy with jelly buttons encrusted with limpets, barnacles and winkles and are seedbeds for mussels.
    • Mussels and limpets are their primary food, but Black Oystercatchers prey on a wide range of shellfish and other creatures found along the rocky shore.
    • Barnacles are crustaceans like crabs and shrimps but, because of their appearance, until the 19th century they were thought to be molluscs like limpets and whelks.
    1. 1.1 Used in comparisons to refer to people and things that cling tightly.
      the couples on the floor were clinging to each other like limpets

Origin

Old English lempedu, from medieval Latin lampreda 'limpet, lamprey'.

Definition of limpet in US English:

limpet

nounˈlɪmpɪtˈlimpit
  • 1A marine mollusk with a shallow conical shell and a broad muscular foot, found clinging tightly to rocks.

    䗩,帽贝

    Patellidae, Fissurellidae (the keyhole limpets), and other families, class Gastropoda: numerous species, including the common limpet (Patella vulgata)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It seems that as limpets creep across rocks, eating algae, they also eat chalk.
    • Some species of limpets have been shown to spend their entire lives within a few cm of their home scars, while others can move upwards of 1 m during a single tidal cycle.
    • Two thirds along things change, there are some scattered rocks covered in barnacles, limpets, mussels and seaweed.
    • Many of the taxa that apparently diverged in the Paleozoic now are limpets and retain little information about the morphologies of their coiled ancestors.
    • Lottiid and especially fissurelid limpets, neither of which feed predominately on macroalgae, also have given rise to large-bodied taxa in certain temperate oceans.
    • Brains of limpets and abalones are much simpler than brains of garden snails and slugs in histological differentiation.
    • While Pisaster has a very broad diet that includes barnacles, limpets, snails, and chitons, mussels are its preferred prey.
    • In coastal areas, they eat mussels, barnacles, and limpets.
    • Slipper limpets have also made their way across the Atlantic, taking over areas off the coast of the British Isles and Northern Europe.
    • The ‘lock-and-key’ fit of homing limpets may have more to do with resistance to dislodgment than with desiccation.
    • Modern species thrive under intense herbivory from snails, chitons, and limpets, and this has been suggested as one reason for their success.
    • There is a gap of several tens of millions of years between the Middle Permian when the last Metoptomatids lived, and the Middle Triassic when the true limpets appear.
    • In particular, they noted that modem patelloid limpets have segmented scars due to bundling of the large retractor muscle.
    • Two species of limpets, previously unrecorded for the West Point area, have also been found during this study.
    • The sand was dotted with saucer - sized jellyfish, rocks and pools are squidgy with jelly buttons encrusted with limpets, barnacles and winkles and are seedbeds for mussels.
    • Mussels and limpets are their primary food, but Black Oystercatchers prey on a wide range of shellfish and other creatures found along the rocky shore.
    • The shape of a limpet's shell has a great deal to do with whether the animal remains securely attached to its rock or is ripped off and thrown onto dry land or into the waiting tentacles of a hungry sea anemone.
    • Entering the water from the shore, the first animal we spot may well be a mollusc such as a limpet or dog-whelk.
    • Barnacles are crustaceans like crabs and shrimps but, because of their appearance, until the 19th century they were thought to be molluscs like limpets and whelks.
    • Secondary gills are found in Ancylids, which are freshwater limpets adapted to life in fast-flowing streams.
    1. 1.1 Used in comparisons to refer to people and things that cling tightly.
      the couples on the floor were clinging to each other like limpets

Origin

Old English lempedu, from medieval Latin lampreda ‘limpet, lamprey’.

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更新时间:2024/10/19 15:40:58