rhinitis |
inflammation of the mucous membrane of the nose or nasal passages. |
rhino |
a rhinoceros. |
rhino- |
nose. |
rhinoceros |
one of several species of large, plant-eating, hoofed mammals native to Africa and Southeast Asia, having a very thick hide and one or two vertical horns on the snout. |
rhinoplasty |
plastic surgery on the nose. |
rhinovirus |
any of a large group of related RNA viruses that cause respiratory diseases, esp. the common cold. |
rhizo- |
root. |
rhizobium |
any of various soil bacteria that live in a symbiotic relationship with legume plants by forming nodules on the roots and converting atmospheric nitrogen into a form the plants can use. |
rhizoid |
rootlike. [2 definitions] |
rhizome |
an underground horizontal or compressed stem that bears shoots along its upper surface. |
rhizopod |
a protozoan such as the amoeba that moves and takes in food by means of pseudopodia. |
Rh negative |
lacking the Rh factor in the red blood cells. |
rho |
the name of the seventeenth letter of the Greek alphabet. |
Rhode Island |
a New England state on the Atlantic coast between Connecticut and Massachusetts. (abbr.: RI) |
Rhode Island Red |
any of an American breed of chicken with dark reddish brown feathers, that produces brown eggs. |
Rhode Island White |
any of an American breed of chicken with white feathers and a red comb. |
Rhodes grass |
an African creeping grass grown for forage in the southern United States. |
Rhodesia |
Southern Rhodesia, the former name of Zimbabwe. [2 definitions] |
Rhodesian man |
an extinct primitive man of the late Pleistocene Era, whose skeletal remains, found in southern Africa, are similar to modern man except for a large skull and low, massive brow ridges. |
Rhodesian ridge-back |
a large, muscular breed of hunting dog developed in southern Africa that has a tan or tannish red coat and a ridge along the spine formed by the hairs growing forward rather than with the rest of the coat. |
Rhodes scholarship |
any of a number of scholarships at Oxford University in England, established for selected British Commonwealth and U.S. students. |