dodder in English

noun
1
a widely distributed parasitic climbing plant of the morning glory family, with leafless threadlike stems that are attached to the host plant by means of suckers.
Eventually a mat of stems forms around the host plant and the dodder loses contact with the soil.
verb
1
tremble or totter, typically because of old age.
spent and nerve-weary, I doddered into the foyer of a third-rate hotel

Use "dodder" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "dodder" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "dodder", or refer to the context using the word "dodder" in the English Dictionary.

1. The original root of the dodder in the soil then dies.

2. After the accident, the driver could only dodder along.

3. Jim expression nods dully, next dodder along ground went kitchen.

4. A few bays after her operation, she could only dodder along.

5. Certain plants, including mistletoe and dodder, parasitize other plants to obtain water and nutrients. Sentencedict.com

6. The dodder is one kind of annual autoecious weed of alfalfa, cosmopolitan weed quarantine object.

7. The dodder is one kind of annual autoecious weed of alfalfa, cosmopolitan weed quar ine object.

8. 18 Reaching a host is tantamount to survival in dodder and several features in its development enhance this ability.

9. Dodder can reduce agricultural productivity and can render a seed crop unmarketable since it's hard to separate it from its host plant.

10. Acotyledonous (not comparable) Having no seed lobes, as the dodder; also applied to plants which have no true seeds, as ferns, mosses, etc.

11. What does Acotyledonous mean? Having no seed lobes, as the dodder; also applied to plants which have no true seeds, as ferns, mosses, etc

12. Haustorial roots : roots of parasitic plants that can absorb water and nutrients from another plant, such as in mistletoe ( Viscum album ) and dodder .

13. Definitions for the word, Acotyledonous (a.) Having no seed lobes, as the dodder; also applied to plants which have no true seeds, as ferns, mosses, etc.

14. Haustoria A specialized outgrowth of many parasitic fungi and certain parasitic plants such as dodder and broomrape, that penetrates into and withdraws food material from the cells of the host plant.