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Reticulate Pattern Word Scientists Describe Net Century Evolutionary

Reticulate means resembling a net or network. It is often used to describe patterns of veins or lines, and in biology for interwoven evolutionary lineages.

Reticulate (adjective) describes something resembling a net or network, often in the pattern of veins or lines. It is also used in biology to describe interwoven evolutionary lineages.

Word reticulate
Date December 31, 2015
Type adjective
Syllables rih-TIK-yuh-lut
Etymology Though reticulate is used in many contexts, it finds particular use in the field of biology. Reticulate comes from the Latin word reticulum, meaning "small net." It first appeared in English in the mid-1600s and was used in connection with the study of plants even back then. Scientists use reticulate to describe a net-like formation of veins, fibers, or lines that crosses something. For example, a leaf with a pattern of veins that resembles a net would be called a "reticulate leaf." In the early 20th century, scientists also began using the word to describe evolutionary lineages that become interwoven through hybridization.
Examples The lizard had a reticulate pattern of markings on its back.

"In the first decade of this century, though, I sensed a change in the structure of the art world, from a hierarchical pattern to a reticulate one, from a tree to a web." — William Warmus, The Utne Reader, Fall 2015
Definition 1 : resembling a net or network
2 : being or involving evolutionary change dependent on genetic recombination involving diverse interbreeding populations

Tags: wordoftheday::adjective

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