Subkingdom

Word SUBKINGDOM
Character 10
Hyphenation sub king dom
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Subkingdom"

What do we mean by subkingdom?

A taxonomic category of related organisms constituting a major division of a kingdom. noun

A prime subdivision of the animal kingdom; a superclass corresponding to the “branches” or “embranchements” of French zoölogists, as Cuvier, who recognized the four subkingdoms of the vertebrates, mollusks, articulates, and radiates. noun

In botany, a primary division of the vegetable kingdom; the highest class below the kingdom itself. noun

One of the several primary divisions of either the animal, or vegetable kingdom, as, in zoölogy, the Vertebrata, Tunicata, Mollusca, Articulata, Molluscoidea, Echinodermata, Cœlentera, and the Protozoa; in botany, the Phanerogamia, and the Cryptogamia. noun

A taxonomic category below kingdom and above superphylum. noun

(biology) a taxonomic group comprising a major division of a kingdom noun

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word subkingdom. Define subkingdom, subkingdom synonyms, subkingdom pronunciation, subkingdom translation, English dictionary definition of subkingdom.

Synonyms and Antonyms for Subkingdom

  • Synonyms for subkingdom
  • Subkingdom synonyms not found!!!
  • Antonyms for subkingdom
  • Subkingdom antonyms not found!

The word "subkingdom" in example sentences

Given this remarkable floristic endemism, New Caledonia is often considered a distinct floristic subkingdom. ❋ Unknown (2008)

Maybe either the king came round on circuit or there was some system of delegates (maybe the thane(s)?) to a bigger kingdom- or subkingdom-sized moot? ❋ Carla (2006)

Regards Protozoa as subkingdom and the four great divisions as phyla. ❋ Rennie Wilbur Doane (N/A)

PROTOZOA, the blastosphere by some rare forms, and the gastrula in the essential structure of the COELENTERATES, -- the subkingdom to which the fresh-water hydra and the corals belong. ❋ William Harmon Norton (1900)

This subkingdom comprises at present such familiar forms as the crinoid, the starfish, and the sea urchin. ❋ William Harmon Norton (1900)

This subkingdom includes two classes of interest to the geologist, -- the HYDROZOA, such as the fresh-water hydra and the jellyfish, and the CORALS. ❋ William Harmon Norton (1900)

All forms of animal life, from the coelenterates to the mammals, follow the same path in their embryological development as far as the gastrula stage, but here their paths widely diverge, those of each subkingdom going their own separate ways. ❋ William Harmon Norton (1900)

Although not more than half a dozen out of the million or more species in this subkingdom have thus been brought to the uses of civilization, the forms are interesting not only for what they give, but for the promise of further contributions when this great problem of winning help from the insect world receives adequate consideration. ❋ Nathaniel Southgate Shaler (1873)

Accepting, then, the type of articulates as founded in nature from the similar modes of development and points of structure perceived between the worms and the crustacea on the one hand, and the worms and insects on the other, have we not a strong genetic bond uniting these three great groups into one grand subkingdom, and can we not in imagination perceive the successive steps by which the Creator, acting through the laws of evolution, has built up the great articulate division of the animal kingdom? ❋ Unknown (1872)

"The communication between individuals is especially characteristic of vertebrates, and in the higher members of that subkingdom it plays ❋ Paul Elmer More (1900)

Cross Reference for Subkingdom

  • Subkingdom cross reference not found!

What does subkingdom mean?

Best Free Book Reviews
Book Name Author
Just a Little Hookup E-Book Carly Phillips & Erika Wilde
Lone Star Princess E-Book Lenora Worth
I Am the Wild E-Book Karpov Kinrade
Pride and Prejudice E-Book Jane Austen
The Rebel and the Cowboy E-Book Sarah Mayberry
Best IOS App Reviews