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View synonyms for bulb

bulb

[buhlb]

noun

  1. Botany.

    1. a usually subterranean and often globular bud having fleshy leaves emergent at the top and a stem reduced to a flat disk, rooting from the underside, as in the onion and lily.

    2. a plant growing from such a bud.

  2. any round, enlarged part, especially at the end of a cylindrical object.

    the bulb of a thermometer.

  3. Electricity.

    1. the glass housing, in which a partial vacuum has been established, that contains the filament of an incandescent electric lamp.

    2. an incandescent or fluorescent electric lamp.

  4. Anatomy.,  any of various small, bulb-shaped structures or protuberances.

    olfactory bulb; bulb of urethra.

  5. medulla oblongata.

  6. Building Trades.,  a rounded thickening at the toe of an angle iron or tee.

  7. Nautical.,  a cylindrical or spherical prominence at the forefoot of certain vessels.

  8. Photography.,  a shutter setting in which the shutter remains open as long as the shutter release is depressed. B



bulb

/ bʌlb /

noun

  1. a rounded organ of vegetative reproduction in plants such as the tulip and onion: a flattened stem bearing a central shoot surrounded by fleshy nutritive inner leaves and thin brown outer leaves Compare corm

  2. a plant, such as a hyacinth or daffodil, that grows from a bulb

  3. See light bulb

  4. a rounded part of an instrument such as a syringe or thermometer

  5. anatomy a rounded expansion of a cylindrical organ or part, such as the medulla oblongata

  6. Also called: bulbous bowa bulbous protuberance at the forefoot of a ship to reduce turbulence

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

bulb

  1. A rounded underground storage organ that contains the shoot of a new plant. A bulb consists of a short stem surrounded by fleshy scales (modified leaves) that store nourishment for the new plant. Tulips, lilies, and onions grow from bulbs.

  2. Compare corm rhizome runner tuber

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Other Word Forms

  • bulbed adjective
  • bulbless adjective
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Word History and Origins

Origin of bulb1

1560–70; < Latin bulbus < Greek bolbós onion, bulbous plant
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Word History and Origins

Origin of bulb1

C16: from Latin bulbus , from Greek bolbos onion
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The burst of a thousand flash bulbs lit up the stadium.

“That’s when the light bulb went off for me. Why not bring some of these beautiful plants from the hills into our yard?”

Chris Smith may be a dim bulb, but he’s trying to cross Peacemaker over into the light to burn brighter.

From Salon

On Tuesday afternoon, Tran stood in the shade of the store’s entrance, helping a customer put some garlic bulbs in a plastic bag.

The lightsaber was originally a 1950s camera flash bulb attachment which the production team modified into the piece, according to Propstore's catalogue.

From BBC

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