Library / English Dictionary

    FUNGUS

    Pronunciation (US): Play  (GB): Play

    Irregular inflected form: fungi  Listen to US pronunciation  Listen to GB pronunciation

     I. (noun) 

    Sense 1

    Meaning:

    An organism of the kingdom Fungi lacking chlorophyll and feeding on organic matter; ranging from unicellular or multicellular organisms to spore-bearing syncytiaplay

    Classified under:

    Nouns denoting plants

    Hypernyms ("fungus" is a kind of...):

    being; organism (a living thing that has (or can develop) the ability to act or function independently)

    Meronyms (parts of "fungus"):

    mycelium (the vegetative part of a fungus consisting of a mass of branching threadlike hyphae)

    hymenium (spore-bearing layer of cells in certain fungi containing asci or basidia)

    volva (cuplike structure around the base of the stalk of certain fungi)

    cap; pileus (a fruiting structure resembling an umbrella or a cone that forms the top of a stalked fleshy fungus such as a mushroom)

    Domain member category:

    squamule (a minute scale)

    immune reaction; immune response; immunologic response (a bodily defense reaction that recognizes an invading substance (an antigen: such as a virus or fungus or bacteria or transplanted organ) and produces antibodies specific against that antigen)

    Hyponyms (each of the following is a kind of "fungus"):

    Grifola frondosa; hen-of-the-woods; hen of the woods; Polyporus frondosus (large greyish-brown edible fungus forming a mass of overlapping caps that somewhat resembles a hen at the base of trees)

    Gastroboletus turbinatus (a fungus with a cap that can vary from red to dark brown; superficially resembles a bolete)

    Gastroboletus scabrosus (a dingy yellow brown fungus with a rough stalk that superficially resembles a bolete)

    Macowanites americanus (a small fungus with a fragile cap that cracks to expose the white context and a white stalk that is practically enclosed by the cap)

    Gastrocybe lateritia (a species of Gastrocybe fungus that has a conic cap and a thin stalk; at first the stalk is upright but as it matures the stalk bends over and then downward; the cap then gelatinizes and a slimy mass containing the spores falls to the ground as the stalk collapses)

    bird's-nest fungus (any of various fungi of the family Nidulariaceae having a cup-shaped body containing several egg-shaped structure enclosing the spores)

    Radiigera fuscogleba (a fungus similar to an earthstar except that it does not open up; the spore mass is brown at maturity with a column of sterile tissue extending up into it)

    earthstar (any fungus of the family Geastraceae; in form suggesting a puffball whose outer peridium splits into the shape of a star)

    puffball; true puffball (any of various fungi of the family Lycoperdaceae whose round fruiting body discharges a cloud of spores when mature)

    carrion fungus; stinkhorn (any of various ill-smelling brown-capped fungi of the order Phallales)

    gasteromycete; gastromycete (any fungus of the class Gasteromycetes)

    gyromitra (any fungus of the genus Gyromitra)

    lorchel (a large fungus of the family Helvellaceae)

    false morel (a fungus of the family Helvellaceae)

    Wynnea sparassoides (a fungus with a long solid stalk embedded in soil and a yellow-brown head shaped like a cauliflower)

    Wynnea americana (a fungus composed of several apothecia that look like elongated rabbit ears; the sterile surface is dark brown and warty; the fertile surface is smooth and pinkish orange)

    brown root rot fungus; Thielavia basicola (fungus causing brown root rot in plants of the pea and potato and cucumber families)

    earth-tongue; earthtongue (any club-shaped fungus of the genus Geoglossum)

    rhizoctinia (any fungus now or formerly belonging to the form genus Rhizoctinia)

    dry rot (a fungus causing dry rot)

    green smut fungus; Ustilaginoidea virens (fungus causing green smut in rice)

    Cercospora kopkei; yellow spot fungus (fungus causing yellow spot (a sugarcane disease in Australia))

    blastomycete (any of various yeastlike budding fungi of the genus Blastomyces; cause disease in humans and other animals)

    candida (any of the yeastlike imperfect fungi of the genus Candida)

    monilia (any of the yeastlike imperfect fungi of the genus Monilia)

    verticillium (a fungus of the genus Verticillium)

    mildew (a fungus that produces a superficial (usually white) growth on organic matter)

    mold; mould (a fungus that produces a superficial growth on various kinds of damp or decaying organic matter)

    felt fungus; Septobasidium pseudopedicellatum (fungus that frequently encircles twigs and branches of various trees especially citrus trees in southern United States)

    smut; smut fungus (any fungus of the order Ustilaginales)

    rust; rust fungus (any of various fungi causing rust disease in plants)

    jelly fungus (any fungus of the order Tremellales or Auriculariales whose fruiting body is jellylike in consistency when fresh)

    bolete (any fungus of the family Boletaceae)

    agaric; Fomes igniarius (fungus used in the preparation of punk for fuses)

    clubroot fungus; Plasmodiophora brassicae (a fungus resembling slime mold that causes swellings or distortions of the roots of cabbages and related plants)

    Phytophthora infestans (fungus causing late blight in solanaceous plants especially tomatoes and potatoes)

    Phytophthora citrophthora (causes brown rot gummosis in citrus fruits)

    pythium (any fungus of the genus Pythium)

    white rust (fungus causing a disease characterized by a white powdery mass of conidia)

    Saprolegnia ferax; white fungus (a fungus that attacks living fish and tadpoles and spawn causing white fungus disease: a coating of white hyphae on especially peripheral parts (as fins))

    potato wart fungus; Synchytrium endobioticum (fungus causing potato wart disease in potato tubers)

    pond-scum parasite (an aquatic fungus of genus Synchytriaceae that is parasitic on pond scum)

    slime mold; slime mould (a naked mass of protoplasm having characteristics of both plants and animals; sometimes classified as protoctists)

    false truffle (any of various fungi of the family Rhizopogonaceae having subterranean fruiting bodies similar to the truffle)

    stalked puffball (mushroom of the genus Tulostoma that resembles a puffball)

    earthball; false truffle; hard-skinned puffball; puffball (any of various fungi of the genus Scleroderma having hard-skinned subterranean fruiting bodies resembling truffles)

    sclerotinia (any fungus of the genus Sclerotinia; some causing brown rot diseases in plants)

    dead-man's-fingers; dead-men's-fingers; Xylaria polymorpha (the fruiting bodies of the fungi of the genus Xylaria)

    black root rot fungus; Xylaria mali (fungus causing black root rot in apples)

    Claviceps purpurea; ergot (a fungus that infects various cereal plants forming compact black masses of branching filaments that replace many grains of the plant; source of medicinally important alkaloids and of lysergic acid)

    Ceratostomella ulmi; Dutch elm fungus (fungus causing Dutch elm disease)

    Aspergillus fumigatus (a mold causing aspergillosis in birds and man)

    yeast (any of various single-celled fungi that reproduce asexually by budding or division)

    ascomycete; ascomycetous fungus (any fungus of the class Ascomycetes (or subdivision Ascomycota) in which the spores are formed inside an ascus)

    sac fungus (any of various ascomycetous fungi in which the spores are formed in a sac or ascus)

    Volvaria bombycina (a parasite on various trees)

    coffee fungus; Pellicularia koleroga (fungus causing a disease in coffee and some other tropical plants)

    Pellicularia filamentosa; potato fungus; Rhizoctinia solani (fungus causing a disease in potatoes characterized by black scurfy spots on the tubers)

    bottom rot fungus; Corticium solani (fungus causing bottom rot in lettuce)

    Corticium salmonicolor; pink disease fungus (fungus causing pink disease in citrus and coffee and rubber trees etc)

    Lentinus lepideus; scaly lentinus (a fungus with a scaly cap and white flesh and a ring on the stalk (with scales below the ring); odor reminiscent of licorice)

    Chinese black mushroom; golden oak mushroom; Lentinus edodes; Oriental black mushroom; shiitake; shiitake mushroom (edible east Asian mushroom having a golden or dark brown to blackish cap and an inedible stipe)

    basidiomycete; basidiomycetous fungi (any of various fungi of the subdivision Basidiomycota)

    true fungus (any of numerous fungi of the division Eumycota)

    lichen (any thallophytic plant of the division Lichenes; occur as crusty patches or bushy growths on tree trunks or rocks or bare ground etc.)

    tooth fungus (a fungus of the family Hydnaceae)

    coral fungus (any of numerous fungi of the family Clavariaceae often brightly colored that grow in often intricately branched clusters like coral)

    earth-ball; earthnut; truffle (any of various highly prized edible subterranean fungi of the genus Tuber; grow naturally in southwestern Europe)

    Holonyms ("fungus" is a member of...):

    Fungi; fungus kingdom; kingdom Fungi (the taxonomic kingdom including yeast, molds, smuts, mushrooms, and toadstools; distinct from the green plants)

    Derivation:

    fungal; fungous (of or relating to fungi)

    Credits

     Context examples: 

    The fungus is very common in both indoors and outdoors.

    (Aspergillosis, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)

    Drug treatment to destroy or inhibit the growth or multiplication of fungi.

    (Antifungal Therapy, NCI Thesaurus)

    Drugs that treat infections caused by fungi.

    (Antifungal Agent, NCI Dictionary)

    A drug that is used to treat infections caused by fungi.

    (Anidulafungin, NCI Dictionary)

    Substances that treat systemic or topical infections caused by fungi.

    (Antifungal Agent, NCI Thesaurus)

    Mycotoxins are toxic, secondary metabolites of low molecular weight produced by naturally occurring fungi.

    (Mycotoxin, NCI Thesaurus)

    Researchers have been investigating the potential of tRNA synthetase inhibitors to fight bacteria, fungi, cancers, and autoimmune diseases.

    (Scientists Discover Antibiotic Mechanism, NIH)

    A living thing, such as an animal, a plant, a bacterium, or a fungus.

    (Organism, NCI Dictionary)

    Immune responses to fungi are similar across vertebrates, and many animals are capable of learning to avoid natural enemies.

    (Amphibians can acquire resistance to deadly fungus, NSF)

    Nystatin is made by certain strains of bacteria and kills fungi by binding to their membranes.

    (Nystatin, NCI Dictionary)


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