ETYM Latin capsula a little box or chest, from capsa chest, case, from capere to take, contain: cf. French capsule.
In botany, a dry, usually many-seeded fruit formed from an ovary composed of two or more fused carpels, which splits open to release the seeds. The same term is used for the spore-containing structure of mosses and liverworts; this is borne at the top of a long stalk or seta.
Capsules burst open (dehisce) in various ways, including lengthwise, by a transverse lid—for example, scarlet pimpernel Anagallis arvensis—or by a number of pores, either toward the top of the capsule, as in the poppy Papaver, or near the base, as in certain species of bellflower Campanula.
1. A pill in the form of a small rounded container with medicine inside.
2. A small container (as one holding electronic equipment).
3. A dry dehiscent seed vessel or the spore-containing structure of e.g. mosses.
4. A structure that encloses a body part.
ETYM Probably akin to pudding, and perhaps the same word as pad a cushion; cf. also Dan. pude pillow, cushion, and also Eng. cod a husk, pod.
1. A group of aquatic mammals.
2. A detachable container of fuel on an airplane; SYN. fuel pod.
3. A bit socket in a brace.
4. A straight groove or channel in the barrel of an auger.
Saggar, clay box in which delicate ceramics are fired.
(Anatomie) Umhüllung von Organen, meist aus Bindegewebe bestehend (z.B. Leber-K., Gelenk-K.). Auch Krankheitsherde (Abszesse, gutartige Geschwulste) können K. bilden.
(Botanik) Aus mindestens 2 Fruchtblättern verwachsene Streufrucht.