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单词 leaf
释义

leaf


leaf

L0086500 (lēf) n. pl. leaves (lēvz) 1. A usually green, flattened, lateral structure attached to a stem and functioning as a principal organ of photosynthesis and transpiration in most plants. 2. A leaflike organ or structure. 3. a. Leaves considered as a group; foliage. b. The state or time of having or showing leaves: trees in full leaf. 4. The leaves of a plant used or processed for a specific purpose: large supplies of tobacco leaf. 5. Any of the sheets of paper bound in a book, each side of which constitutes a page. 6. a. A very thin sheet of material, especially metal. b. Such leaves considered as a group: covered in gold leaf. 7. a. A hinged or removable section for a table top. b. A hinged or otherwise movable section of a folding door, shutter, or gate. c. A section of drawbridge that moves upward or to the side. 8. One of several metal strips forming a leaf spring. v. leafed, leaf·ing, leafs v. intr. 1. To produce leaves; put forth foliage: trees just beginning to leaf. 2. To turn pages, as in searching or browsing: leafed through the catalog. v. tr. To turn through the pages of. Phrasal Verb: leaf out To put forth leaves, especially after a period of dormancy: the period in the spring when trees begin to leaf out. Idioms: take a leaf from (someone) To use (someone) as an example. take a leaf from (or out of) (someone's) bookTo use (someone) as an example.
[Middle English, from Old English lēaf.]

leaf

(liːf) n, pl leaves (liːvz) 1. (Botany) the main organ of photosynthesis and transpiration in higher plants, usually consisting of a flat green blade attached to the stem directly or by a stalk. 2. (Botany) foliage collectively3. (Botany) in leaf (of shrubs, trees, etc) having a full complement of foliage leaves4. (Printing, Lithography & Bookbinding) one of the sheets of paper in a book5. (Furniture) a hinged, sliding, or detachable part, such as an extension to a table6. (Metallurgy) metal in the form of a very thin flexible sheet: gold leaf. 7. (Metallurgy) a foil or thin strip of metal in a composite material; lamina8. (General Engineering) short for leaf spring9. (Building) the inner or outer wall of a cavity wall10. (Agriculture) a crop that is harvested in the form of leaves11. (General Engineering) a metal strip forming one of the laminations in a leaf spring12. (Plants) a slang word for marijuana13. take a leaf out of someone's book take a leaf from someone's book to imitate someone, esp in one particular course of action14. turn over a new leaf to begin a new and improved course of behaviourvb15. (when: intr, usually foll by through) to turn (through pages, sheets, etc) cursorily16. (Botany) (intr) (of plants) to produce leaves[Old English; related to Gothic laufs, Icelandic lauf] ˈleafless adj ˈleaflessness n ˈleafˌlike adj

leaf

art at leak (lif)

n., pl. leaves (livz)
v. n. 1. one of the expanded, usu. green organs borne by the stem of a plant. 2. any similar or corresponding lateral outgrowth of a stem. 3. leaves collectively. 4. a sheet usu. of paper, esp. as part of a document, one side of each sheet constituting a page. 5. a thin sheet of metal: silver leaf. 6. a lamina or layer. 7. a sliding, hinged, or detachable flat part, as of a tabletop. 8. a single strip of metal in a leaf spring. v.i. 9. to put forth leaves. 10. to turn pages, esp. quickly (usu. fol. by through): to leaf through a book. v.t. 11. to thumb or turn, as the pages of a book or magazine. Idioms: 1. in leaf, covered with foliage; having leaves. 2. turn over a new leaf, to begin anew; make a fresh start. [before 900; Middle English leef, lef, Old English lēaf, c. Old Saxon lōf, Old High German loub, Old Norse lauf, Gothic laufs] leaf′less, adj.

leaf

(lēf)Noun A flat, usually green plant part that grows on the stem and takes in carbon dioxide and sunlight to manufacture food by photosynthesis. Leaves consist of an outer tissue layer (the epidermis) through which water and gases are exchanged, a spongy inner layer of cells that contain chloroplasts, and veins that supply water and minerals and carry out food. Some leaves are simple, while others are compound, consisting of multiple leaflets.Verb To produce leaves.

leaf


Past participle: leafed
Gerund: leafing
Imperative
leaf
leaf
Present
I leaf
you leaf
he/she/it leafs
we leaf
you leaf
they leaf
Preterite
I leafed
you leafed
he/she/it leafed
we leafed
you leafed
they leafed
Present Continuous
I am leafing
you are leafing
he/she/it is leafing
we are leafing
you are leafing
they are leafing
Present Perfect
I have leafed
you have leafed
he/she/it has leafed
we have leafed
you have leafed
they have leafed
Past Continuous
I was leafing
you were leafing
he/she/it was leafing
we were leafing
you were leafing
they were leafing
Past Perfect
I had leafed
you had leafed
he/she/it had leafed
we had leafed
you had leafed
they had leafed
Future
I will leaf
you will leaf
he/she/it will leaf
we will leaf
you will leaf
they will leaf
Future Perfect
I will have leafed
you will have leafed
he/she/it will have leafed
we will have leafed
you will have leafed
they will have leafed
Future Continuous
I will be leafing
you will be leafing
he/she/it will be leafing
we will be leafing
you will be leafing
they will be leafing
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been leafing
you have been leafing
he/she/it has been leafing
we have been leafing
you have been leafing
they have been leafing
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been leafing
you will have been leafing
he/she/it will have been leafing
we will have been leafing
you will have been leafing
they will have been leafing
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been leafing
you had been leafing
he/she/it had been leafing
we had been leafing
you had been leafing
they had been leafing
Conditional
I would leaf
you would leaf
he/she/it would leaf
we would leaf
you would leaf
they would leaf
Past Conditional
I would have leafed
you would have leafed
he/she/it would have leafed
we would have leafed
you would have leafed
they would have leafed
Thesaurus
Noun1.leaf - the main organ of photosynthesis and transpiration in higher plantsleaf - the main organ of photosynthesis and transpiration in higher plantsfoliage, leafagevenation - (botany) the arrangement of veins in a leafcataphyll - a reduced or scarcely developed leaf at the start of a plant's life (i.e., cotyledons) or in the early stages of leaf developmentfloral leaf - a modified leaf that is part of a flowerdandelion green - the foliage of the dandelion plantpitcher - (botany) a leaf that that is modified in such a way as to resemble a pitcher or ewerplant organ - a functional and structural unit of a plant or fungussporophyl, sporophyll - leaf in ferns and mosses that bears the sporangiaparenchyma - the primary tissue of higher plants composed of thin-walled cells that remain capable of cell division even when mature; constitutes the greater part of leaves, roots, the pulp of fruits, and the pith of stemsblade, leaf blade - especially a leaf of grass or the broad portion of a leaf as distinct from the petioleamplexicaul leaf - a leaf with its base clasping the stemgreenery, verdure - green foliageleaflet - part of a compound leaffrond - compound leaf of a fern or palm or cycadpad - the large floating leaf of an aquatic plant (as the water lily)scale leaf, scale - a specialized leaf or bract that protects a bud or catkinfig leaf - a leaf from a fig treesimple leaf - a leaf that is not divided into partscompound leaf - a leaf composed of a number of leaflets on a common stalkentire leaf - a leaf having a smooth margin without notches or indentationscrenate leaf - a leaf having a scalloped marginserrate leaf - a leaf having a margin notched like a saw with teeth pointing toward the apexdentate leaf - a leaf having a toothed marginemarginate leaf - a leaf having a notch at the apexerose leaf - a leaf having a jagged margin as though gnawedruncinate leaf - a leaf having incised margins with the lobes or teeth curved toward the base; as a dandelion leaflobed leaf - a leaf having deeply indented marginslobe - (botany) a part into which a leaf is dividedparallel-veined leaf - a leaf whose veins run in parallel from the stemparted leaf - a leaf having margins incised almost to the base so as to create distinct divisions or lobesprickly-edged leaf - a leaf having prickly marginsrosette - a cluster of leaves growing in crowded circles from a common center or crown (usually at or close to the ground)leaf form, leaf shape - any of the various shape that leaves of plants can assume
2.leaf - a sheet of any written or printed material (especially in a manuscript or book)foliopiece of paper, sheet of paper, sheet - paper used for writing or printingflyleaf - a blank leaf in the front or back of a bookinterleaf - a blank leaf inserted between the leaves of a bookpage - one side of one leaf (of a book or magazine or newspaper or letter etc.) or the written or pictorial matter it containsblack and white, written communication, written language - communication by means of written symbols (either printed or handwritten)
3.leaf - hinged or detachable flat section (as of a table or door)dinner table - the dining table where dinner is served and eatendrop-leaf - a hinged leaf on a table that can be raised and supported by a bracketsegment, section - one of several parts or pieces that fit with others to constitute a whole object; "a section of a fishing rod"; "metal sections were used below ground"; "finished the final segment of the road"
Verb1.leaf - look through a book or other written material; "He thumbed through the report"; "She leafed through the volume"riff, riffle, thumb, flick, flipperuse - examine or consider with attention and in detail; "Please peruse this report at your leisure"
2.leaf - turn over pages; "leaf through a book"; "leaf a manuscript"turn over, turn - cause to move around a center so as to show another side of; "turn a page of a book"
3.leaf - produce leaves, of plantsacquire, develop, produce, grow, get - come to have or undergo a change of (physical features and attributes); "He grew a beard"; "The patient developed abdominal pains"; "I got funny spots all over my body"; "Well-developed breasts"

leaf

noun1. frond, flag, needle, pad, blade, bract, cotyledon, foliole The leaves of the horse chestnut had already fallen.2. page, sheet, folio He flattened the wrappers and put them between the leaves of his book.leaf through something (with book, magazine etc. as object) skim, glance, scan, browse, look through, dip into, flick through, flip through, thumb through, riffle Most patients derive enjoyment from leafing through old picture albums.turn over a new leaf reform, change, improve, amend, make a fresh start, begin anew, change your ways, mend your ways He realized he was in the wrong and promised to turn over a new leaf.Related words
adjectives foliar, foliate

leaf

verbTo look through reading matter casually.Also used with through:browse, dip into, flip through, glance at (or over) (or through), riffle (through), run through, scan, skim, thumb (through).
Translations
一张叶树叶活动桌面

leaf

(liːf) plural leaves (liːvz) noun1. a part of a plant growing from the side of a stem, usually green, flat and thin, but of various shapes depending on the plant. Many trees lose their leaves in autumn.2. something thin like a leaf, especially the page of a book. Several leaves had been torn out of the book. (書刊等的)一張 (书刊等的)一张 3. an extra part of a table, either attached to one side with a hinge or added to the centre when the two ends are apart. 活動桌面板 活动桌面ˈleaflet (-lit) noun a small, printed sheet containing information etc. 傳單 传单ˈleafy adjective having many leaves. a leafy plant. 多葉的 叶茂的turn over a new leaf to begin a new and better way of behaving, working etc. 改頭換面,重新做人 翻开新的一页,重新开始,改过自新

leaf

树叶zhCN

leaf


leaf

n. cocaine. (Sometimes with the. Cocaine is extracted from the leaves of the coca plant.) The entire shipment of leaf was seized by the feds.
See:
  • a fig leaf
  • be shaking like a leaf
  • fig leaf
  • four-leaf clover
  • in leaf
  • leaf
  • leaf out
  • leaf through
  • leaf through (something)
  • quake in one's boots
  • quake like a leaf
  • quake/shake like a leaf, to
  • shake like a jelly/leaf
  • shake like a leaf
  • shake like an aspen leaf
  • take a leaf from
  • take a leaf from (one)
  • take a leaf from (someone's) book
  • take a leaf out of (one's) book
  • take a leaf out of book
  • take a leaf out of somebody's book
  • take a leaf out of someone's book
  • take a leaf out of someone's book, to
  • thumb through
  • turn over a new leaf
  • turn over a new leaf, to

leaf


leaf,

chief food-manufacturing organ of a plant, a lateral outgrowth of the growing point of stem. The typical leaf consists of a stalk (the petiole) and a blade—the thin, flat, expanded portion (needlelike in most conifers) that is normally green in color because of the presence of the pigment chlorophyll. In many leaves, small processes called stipules occur at the base of the stalk and protect the bud; sometimes the stipule is large (as in the Japanese quince) and, if green, also manufactures food. The leaf blade is veined with sap-conducting tubes (xylem and phloem) with thick-walled supporting cells. The blade consists of an upper and a lower layer of closely fitted epidermal cells, including specialized paired guard cells that control the size of tiny pores, or stomata, for gaseous exchange and the release of water vapor (see transpirationtranspiration,
in botany, the loss of water by evaporation in terrestrial plants. Some evaporation occurs directly through the exposed walls of surface cells, but the greatest amount takes place through the stomates, or intercellular spaces (see leaf).
..... Click the link for more information.
). The upper epidermis is usually coated with a waterproof cuticle and contains fewer stomata than the underside, if any at all. Between these two layers are large palisade and spongy cells, rich in chlorophyll for food manufacture (see photosynthesisphotosynthesis
, process in which green plants, algae, and cyanobacteria utilize the energy of sunlight to manufacture carbohydrates from carbon dioxide and water in the presence of chlorophyll. Some of the plants that lack chlorophyll, e.g.
..... Click the link for more information.
) and permeated with interconnecting air passages leading to the stomata. Leaves vary in size (up to 60 ft/18m long in some palms), shape, venation, color, and texture, and are classified as simple (one blade) or compound (divided into leaflets). The blade margins may be entire (smooth and unindented), toothed (with small sharp or wavy indentations), or lobed (with large indentations, or sinuses). In monocotyledonous plants, the veins are usually parallel; dicotyledons have leaves with reticulately branched veins that may be pinnate (with one central vein, the midrib, and smaller branching veins) or palmate (with several large veins branching from the leaf base into the blade). Pigments besides chlorophyll that give a leaf its characteristic color are the carotenoids (orange-red and yellow), the anthocyanins (red, purple, and blue), and the tannins (brown). White results from the absence of pigments. In deciduous plants, a layer of cells forms the abscission tissue at the base of the stalk in the autumn, cutting off the flow of sap; the unstable chlorophyll disintegrates and, in a temperate zone, the remaining pigments are displayed to produce colorful fall foliage. When these cells dry up completely, the leaf falls. Evergreen plants usually produce new leaves as soon as the old ones fall; the leaves of most conifers remain on the tree from 2 to 10 years (in some species up to 20 years). Leaves may be modified or specialized for protection (spines and bud scales), climbing (tendrils), trapping insects (as in pitcher plants), water storage (as in succulents), or food storage (bulb scales and, in the embryo plantlet, cotyledons).

Leaf

A lateral appendage which is borne on a plant stem at a node (joint) and which usually has a bud in its axil. In most plants, leaves are flattened in form, although they may be nearly cylindrical with a sheathing base as in onion. Leaves usually contain chlorophyll and are the principal organs in which the important processes of photosynthesis and transpiration occur.

Morphology

A complete dicotyledon leaf consists of three parts: the expanded portion or blade; the petiole which supports the blades; and the leaf base. Stipules are small appendages that arise as outgrowths of the leaf base and are attached at the base of the petiole. The leaves of monocotyledons may have a petiole and a blade, or they may be linear in shape without differentiation into these parts; in either case the leaf base usually encircles the stem. The leaves of grasses consist of a linear blade attached to the stem by an encircling sheath.

Leaves are borne on a stem in a definite fixed order, or phyllotaxy, according to species (Fig. 1). For identification purposes, leaves are classified according to type (Fig. 2) and shape (Fig. 3), and types of margins (Fig. 4), tips, and bases (Fig. 5). The arrangement of the veins, or vascular bundles, of a leaf is called venation (Fig. 6). The main longitudinal veins are usually interconnected with small veins. Reticulate venation is most common in dicotyledons, parallel venation in monocotyledons.

Leaf arrangementLeaf arrangement Leaf typesLeaf types Leaf shapesLeaf shapes Leaf margins of various typesLeaf margins of various types Leaf tips and basesLeaf tips and bases Leaf venationLeaf venation

Surfaces of leaves provide many characteristics that are used in identification. A surface is glabrous if it is smooth or free from hairs; glaucous if covered with a whitish, waxy material, or “bloom”; scabrous if rough or harsh to the touch; pubescent, a general term for surfaces that are hairy; puberulent if covered with very fine, downlike hairs; villous if covered with long, soft, shaggy hairs; hirsute if the hairs are short, erect, and stiff; and hispid if they are dense, bristly, and harshly stiff.

The texture may be described as succulent when the leaf is fleshy and juicy; hyaline if it is thin and almost wholly transparent; chartaceous if papery and opaque but thin; scarious if thin and dry, appearing shriveled; and coriaceous if tough, thickish, and leathery.

Leaves may be fugacious, failing nearly as soon as formed; deciduous, failing at the end of the growing season; marcescent, withering at the end of the growing season but not falling until toward spring; or persistent, remaining on the stem for more than one season, the plant thus being evergreen. See Deciduous plants, Evergreen plants

Anatomy

The foliage leaf is the chief photosynthetic organ of most vascular plants. Although leaves vary greatly in size and form, they share the same basic organization of internal tissues and have similar developmental pathways. Like the stem and root, leaves consist of three basic tissue systems: the dermal tissue system, the vascular tissue system, and the ground tissue system. However, unlike stems and roots which usually have radial symmetry, the leaf blade usually shows dorsiventral symmetry, with vascular and other tissues being arranged in a flat plane.

Stems and roots have apical meristems and are thus characterized by indeterminate growth; leaves lack apical meristems, and therefore have determinate growth. Because leaves are more or less ephemeral organs and do not function in the structural support of the plant, they usually lack secondary growth and are composed largely of primary tissue only. See Apical meristem, Root (botany), Stem

The internal organization of the leaf is well adapted for its major functions of photosynthesis, gas exchange, and transpiration. The photosynthetic cells, or chlorenchyma tissue, are normally arranged in horizontal layers, which facilitates maximum interception of the Sun's radiation. The vascular tissues form an extensive network throughout the leaf so that no photosynthetic cell is far from a source of water, and carbohydrates produced by the chlorenchyma cells need travel only a short distance to reach the phloem in order to be transported out of the leaf (Fig. 7). The epidermal tissue forms a continuous covering over the leaf so that undue water loss is reduced, while at the same time the exchange of carbon dioxide and oxygen is controlled. See Epidermis (plant), Parenchyma, Phloem, Xylem

Three-dimensional diagram of internal structure of a typical dicotyledon leafThree-dimensional diagram of internal structure of a typical dicotyledon leaf

Leaf

 

the organ of higher plants that performs the functions of photosynthesis and transpiration, ensures gas exchange with atmospheric air, and participates in other important processes of plant life activity.

Morphology, anatomy, and origin. The leaf usually differs morphologically from the other vegetative organs of higher plants—the root and the stem—by its dorsoventral (and not radial) symmetry, lateral position, and, as a rule, limited basal growth. The leaf arises from the outer layers of cells of the primary meristem of the growing point of the stem. In the majority of plants the leaf initially grows apically and then inter-calarily.

Most often the leaf consists of a broad, flat blade, or lamina, in which all basic physiological processes occur, and a leafstalk, or petiole, which attaches the blade to the stem. The petiole enables the leaf to occupy a definite position in relation to the light. In many plants, including a large number of Scro-phulariaceae and Labiatae, the leaf has no expressed petiole; such a leaf is called sessile. Often plants are encountered that simultaneously have both sessile and petiolate leaves. The lower part of the leaf is often broadened into a sheath, which more or less embraces the stem. Leaves with well-expressed sheaths are especially characteristic of Umbelliferae and Gramineae. In many plants paired, symmetrically placed appendages, or stipules, usually develop near the base of the leaf; the stipules are in the form of leaflets, bristles, or scales.

The types of leaves are extremely varied. A leaf is simple when it has a petiole and a single blade; compound, when there is a central petiole, or central axis (rachis), and petioles (axes) of subsequent orders to which leaflets are attached. The parts that compose a typical compound leaf are equipped with nodes. The leaf blade may be rounded, elliptic, lanceolate, rhomboid, ovate, or one of many other shapes. A leaf may also be acicular, subulate, bristle-shaped, cylindrical, or some other form. In addition, leaves are described as being squamiform, peltate, or infundibuliform.

The shape of the base of the blade (for example, cordate, hastate, or reniform), the outline of its apex (pointed or obtuse), and the nature of its margin (dentate, serrate, crenate, or entire) are of great importance in the classification of leaves. Depending on the type and depth of segmentation of the blades, leaves are described as lobed, divided, or dissected. Of particular significance, especially in the research of fossil plants, is the type of venation in the blade (pinnate, digitate, palmate, or arcuate). The leaf may be glabrous, pubescent, rugose, scarious, coriaceous, or succulent.

The average length of a leaf is 3–10 cm; however, its length may vary from a few mm to 20 m (in the resinous rafia palm). The life-span of a leaf, particularly of plants in temperate latitudes, is usually short—about six months; the leaves die at the end of the growing season. Only in evergreen plants are the leaves not changed periodically but live more than a year. The leaves of the same plant usually differ from one another insignificantly, mainly in size; however, sometimes heterophylly is observed. Leaves occur on the stem in a definite order and develop with a certain consistency. In many plants the leaf arrangement (phyllotaxy) and the active orientation of the leaves in the plane transverse to the direction of the light promote maximum utilization of light, forming a leaf mosaic.

Leaves, particularly those of flowering plants, are sensitive to their environment and its changes. They are more capable than other organs of adaptive modifications; for example, they are able to adapt to life in arid regions and in other unusual or extreme conditions. In spite of the structural similarity of their general features, there are significant differences in the characteristics of leaves in representatives of different divisions or classes of higher plants. The leaves of conifers are usually acicular, their epidermis has a thick cuticle, resin ducts pass through their central tissue, and their vascular bundles are surrounded by a special transfusion tissue. The leaves of dicotyledons as a rule have reticular veining, often with a dissected compound blade. The leaves of monocotyledons most often have parallel or arcuate venation, are often linear, and are only sometimes dissected.

The anatomical structure of leaves differs even within a single species; however, the general features are uniform even in different species. Usually the blade is supplied on both sides with a single-layered tissue, the epidermis. Between the upper and lower epidermis is the central tissue, or mesophyll, and the spongy tissue. The mesophyll is usually differentiated into columnar, or palisade, tissue, which consists of elongated cells with chloroplasts and occupies the upper part of the leaf that is turned toward the light. The spongy tissue is composed of cells with large intercellular spaces and fills the lower part of the leaf. The leaf is filled with veins—vascular bundles—that, along with the mechanical tissues, constitute the stroma of the leaf The mechanical tissues, which make the leaf firm, most often are located near large veins but sometimes develop into mesophyll. The cells of the epidermis are often colorless and group tightly together. They are living and, with the exception of the guard cells located in the epidermis, lack chlorophyll. The external surface of the epidermis is covered usually by a cuticle and sometimes with a waxy bloom, which provide the epidermis with its protective ability. It is possible that the hairs on the leaf surface also play a protective role. The numerous stomata in the epidermis permit the exchange of gases and transpiration. External air that penetrates the intercellular spaces of the spongy parenchyma enters the leaf, which in turn discharges gases and water vapor.

The origin and development of the leaf is associated with the adaptation of plants to various conditions of terrestrial life. It is most probable that in the majority of plants the leaf is the result of the differentiation, flattening, and concrescence of the lateral axes of the branch system of the plant. Only in a few plants, such as the club mosses, does the leaf originate as an exogenous outgrowth of axial organs. Often the leaf is not considered to be a separate organ but only a part of the shoot, the principal organ of the plant. Bryophytes have leaflike outgrowths, which are often called leaves; however, they are not actually homologous with the leaves of other higher plants, since they form on the gametophyte (and not on the sporophyte as in other higher plants).

Physiology. The leaf is an active organ that determines, directs, and regulates the life activity of the plant. By changing the quantity and quality of the products formed in the process of photosynthesis under the influence of various conditions, the leaves determine the growth of the plant and its productivity. The life activity of the leaf is closely connected with that of the entire plant. In supplying the plant with assimilates, the leaf, with the aid of other organs, supplies itself with water, mineral elements, and certain stimulating substances (such as kinins).

Accordingly, the leaf has a number of features that are characteristically important for the performance of its functions. One feature is the leaf’s adaptability for intensive gaseous exchanges with atmospheric air. Thus, a surface area of 1 sq m can assimilate up to 6–8 g (3–4 liters) of CO2 and simultaneously release the same volume of O2 into the atmosphere. High effectiveness in the exchange of gases is ensured by the leaf’s structure (the thickness of the blade usually measures 0.1 –0.25 mm) and high indexes of the ratio of the blade’s surface S to the volume V(S/V = 100–200 cm2/cm3) or to the raw and dry weight (100 and 500 cm2/g, respectively). The high capacity of the leaf for gaseous exchange is determined by its great porositv, the presence of stomata in the epidermis (up to 30,000 per cm2), and the porous structure of the mesophyll.

Intensive photosynthetic activity requires rapid outflow of the assimilates from the leaves into other organs. Thus, the rate of photosynthesis is determined by the degree of development of the vascular systems, particularly the phloem of the vascular bundles (veins). In some plants the anatomic structure and, specifically, the presence of parietal cells in the vascular bundles in which chloroplasts are concentrated and large quantities of starch are stored play a role in the intensification of the transport of food from the leaf to the other organs. Many plants whose leaves have such a structure (corn, sugarcane, sorghum) are characterized by a special type of photosynthesis, an intense rate of photosynthesis, and high productivity.

An indispensable condition for photosynthesis is the presence in the chloroplasts of assimilating cells of chlorophyll and carotenoids, the contents of which differ in different plants. When there is a content of chlorophyll of 2–4 mg or more per square decimeter of leaf blade, the quantity of chlorophyll no longer limits photosynthesis. In this case the leaves absorb practically all the light energy entering them of wavelengths from 360 to 720 nanometers and some quantity of the energy of infrared rays (only about 5 percent of the energy passes through and 12–15 percent is usually reflected). Under these conditions, at noon on a sunny day 1 sq m of leaf blade can absorb up to 1.5 megajoules (360 kilocalories) of energy per hour. However, under the best conditions, only 5–10 percent of that energy is converted to the energy of chemical bonds. The rest is converted to heat and, in heating the leaf, is partially released into the atmosphere as a result of heat transfer. There is no overheating of the leaf, because approximately 247 kilojoules (59 kilocalories) are expended for every 100 g of water that the leaf transpires in large quantities (thus, 1 sq m of leaf surface, forming about 4–6 g of assimilates per hour under the highest illumination, can transpire up to 500–700 g of water).

However, plants often (for example, in zones of deficient water supply) form leaves whose structure ensures a better supply of water and sometimes a greater rate of transpiration, increasing its suction force. When there are temporary disturbances of water balance, regulatory systems in the leaf are activated, such as movements of the stomata and the decrease in water transfer by the cells, which simultaneously lead to a decrease in the intensity of gaseous exchanges and, consequently, of photosynthesis. The waxy bloom on leaves, the pubescence of the epidermis, the decrease in the number of stomata, the thickening of the leaf as a result of intense development of well-hydrated tissue, and the conversion of leaves to thorns or scales (the photosynthetic function is performed in such cases by stem organs that contain chlorophyll) promote the maintenance of water-heat balance at an optimum level. There are also reduced leaves in many parasitic plants that feed on organic substances not obtained from photosynthesis but through suckers from their host plants.

However, it is not the individual leaf or the solitary plant but their aggregate as integral photosynthesizing systems in natural or cultivated phytocoenoses that ensures in the process of photosynthesis the best use by leaves of the abundant sunlight that reaches the earth’s surface, of the CO2 from the air, and of the factors of soil fertility. Consequently, the highest productivity is obtained. Under favorable conditions, the phytocoenoses of the majority of plants can absorb practically all the energy of the light entering them and yield maximum productivity by forming an optimum leaf surface — 4 –5 sq m per sq m of earth surface. Thus, obtaining crops of the best quality and with optimum leaf surface is the most important task in increasing plant productivity. This problem is being solved in various ways based on the general principles of phytocoenoses and of the photosynthetic activity of leaves. Thus, through photosynthesis, which occurs predominantly in the leaf, the ecological function of green plants, which consists of absorbing solar energy for the biosynthesis of organic matter, is realized. Through the processes of photosynthesis and respiration, the leaves maintain the balance of O2 and CO2 in the air; through transpiration, leaves participate in the water cycle on earth.

Use. Leaves are used by man in various ways. The leaves of many plants, such as lettuce, dock, dill, cabbage, onion, and parsley, are used as food. The leaves of henbane, senna, foxglove, and many other plants yield medicinal substances. Some leaves are used as feed for agricultural animals (hay, silage, and fresh grass). The leaves of the mulberry tree are food for the mulberry silkworm. Essential oils used in the perfume and confectionery industries are obtained from the leaves of geranium, mint, and other plants. The leaves of some plants yield tannins. Tea and tobacco leaves serve as raw materials in the tea and tobacco industries. In the tropics the leaves of many plants yield coarse fiber, and palm leaves are used as roofing material.

REFERENCES

Timiriazev, K. A. “Zhizn’ rasteniia (lektsiia 5).” Izbr. soch., vol. 1. Moscow, 1957.
Serebriakov, I. G. Morfologiia vegetativnykh organov vysshikii rastenii. Moscow, 1952.
Fotosinteziruiushchie sistemy vysokoi produktivnosti (collection). Moscow, 1966.
Nichiporovich, A. A. Fotosintez i teoriia polucheniia vysokikh urozhaev. Moscow, 1956.
Fedorov, A. A., M. E. Kirpichnikov, and Z. T. Artiushenko. Atlas po opisatel’noi morfologii vysshikh rastenii: List. Moscow-Leningrad, 1956.
Takhtadzhian, A. L. Osnovy evoliutsionnoi morfologii pokrytosemennykh. Moscow-Leningrad, 1964.
Botanika, 7th ed., vol. 1. Moscow, 1966.
Esau, K. Anatomiia rastenii. Moscow, 1969.
Fotosintez i ispol’zovanie solnechnoi energii (collection). Leningrad, 1971.

M. E. KIRPICHNIKOV, A. A. NICHIPOROVICH, and A. A. FEDOROV

What does it mean when you dream about a leaf?

A green leaf represents new life, whereas a falling leaf can represent something that is falling away. Because Adam and Eve supposedly wore leaves, leaves can symbolize something we try to hide. A dream leaf can also be drawing on the meaning of certain idioms, such as “turn over a new leaf” or “shake like a leaf.”

leaf

[lēf] (botany) A modified aerial appendage which develops from a plant stem at a node, usually contains chlorophyll, and is the principal organ in which photosynthesis and transpiration occur. (building construction) A separately movable division of a folding or sliding door. One of a pair of doors or windows. One of the two halves of a cavity wall. (computer science) terminal vertex

leaf

1. A hinged part; a separately movable division of a folding or sliding door. 2. One of a pair of doors or windows. 3. One of the two halves of a cavity wall.

leaf

1. the main organ of photosynthesis and transpiration in higher plants, usually consisting of a flat green blade attached to the stem directly or by a stalk 2. foliage collectively 3. in leaf (of shrubs, trees, etc.) having a full complement of foliage leaves 4. metal in the form of a very thin flexible sheet 5. a foil or thin strip of metal in a composite material; lamina 6. a metal strip forming one of the laminations in a leaf spring

LEAF

(language)1. LISP Extended Algebraic Facility.

2. "LEAF: A Language which Integrates Logic, Equations andFunctions", R. Barbuti et al in Logic Programming, FunctionsRelations and Equations, D. DeGroot et al eds, P-H 1986,pp.201-238.

leaf

(mathematics, data)(Or "terminal node") In a tree, a nodewhich has no daughter.

leaf

In database management, the last node of a tree.

leaf


Fig. 205 Leaf. (a) Simple leaves. (b) Compound leaves.Fig. 205 Leaf . (a) Simple leaves. (b) Compound leaves.

leaf

the principal photosynthetic organ of vascular plants, which typically consists of a flattened lamina joined to the stem by a stalk or petiole, at which junction an axillary bud can be found. There are numerous types of leaves.
  1. dorsiventral leaves are held horizontally with the upper half of the lamina containing the majority of photosynthetic cells (see MESOPHYLL for diagram). Typically, the lower epidermis contains the majority of STOMATA through which gas exchange and transpiration take place. Leaf veins are usually arranged in a ‘net’ venation with principal veins called midribs. The lamina can be indented to form a ‘compound’ leaf or remain as a simple structure. See Fig. 205 . Dorsiventral leaves are typical of DICOTYLEDONS.
  2. isobilateral leaves grow erectly, with a sword-like shape and are typical of MONOCOTYLEDONS. Both epidermal surfaces contain stomata with palisade mesophyll tissue packed underneath. Isobilateral leaves have a parallel venation and are not divided into compound structures. See also KRANZ ANATOMY.
  3. centric leaves are more or less cylindrical with a central region containing the vascular bundles surrounded by mesophyll tissue. Examples are the needles of pine trees, and onion leaves.

Some leaves have special modifications. For example, water storage leaves are found in many plants living in dry conditions (e.g. cacti). In other plants the leaves are modified into tendrils for climbing (e.g. pea) while in some the leaves have become spines, e.g. gorse.

Patient discussion about leaf

Q. What happens if you leave appendicitis alone? I have symptoms of appendicitis, but I don't want to go to the hospital. What should I do? and what could happen?A. If you have symptoms of appendicitis you should see a doctor immediately, because the major complication of an untreated appendix is rupture and infection of the entire abdomen, that can lead to generalized sepsis.

Q. Any ideas about why she leaves some food in her plate. Thank you for your visit. My daughter is 8 years old and she is a poor eater. She never wants to eat dinner even if it's her favorite dish. And then she picks it and an hour later she says that she feels hungry. She never completes her plate, always leaving a bit, no matter what we feed her. Should she be forced to eat dinner and if she doesn't, have only the dinner to eat later? Any ideas about why she leaves some food in her plate?A. She trusts her mom. The most common reason to be like this is she knows that she will get something to eat later from her dear mom. While she shouldn't be forced to eat, she should learn that her main meal in the evening will be served at the dinner time.
Some other things that you might do to help deal with your picky eater include:
•Make sure that she isn't eating a big snack after school or filling up on juice, soda, or even milk before dinner.
•Offer her smaller portions so that there isn't as much left over on her plate.
•Don’t offer bribes or rewards for eating.
•Never talk about dieting, calories, and such, especially if she or other family members have problems with being overweight. Instead, talk about eating healthy.
•Consider not offering her anything else to eat if she misses dinner or just offer a small, healthy snack.
Mainly a visit to your Pediatrician to monitor her growth, development and eating habits would also be a good idea. Hug her now!

Q. What makes me worried that it’s really painful but might not be able to leave all of a sudden. Doctor diagnosed my son with peanut allergy after some tests. His body generates rashes and these eruptions are painful for him. I thought it big to be eczema as I heard about it, but now it is diagnosed and I am not able to decide how to avoid him of not giving peanuts and to keep him away as he likes them. Once near to me I can try to avoid to some extent, but once away to school or in playing with friends he does eat them regularly. What makes me worried that it’s really painful but might not be able to leave all of a sudden.A. My friend’s brother does have the experience of peanut allergy. These peanuts are nutritious, but its allergy is awful. He has a clear understanding of this and avoids eating them. I too have found that he followed strict guidelines for not eating them when it was diagnosed for him. The best thing is to create some other or new foodstuff taste for him which might help him be consumed an alternative for nuts for some times and then provide with peanuts for him to regain his remembrances for the culprit he consumes. It needs to be done under your care for long time till he develops the inhibitions for nuts. You must also remember to memorize some medicine names and symptoms, so, if consumed unknowingly can explain what it is to anyone responsible nearby.

More discussions about leaf
FinancialSeeLeaves

LEAF


AcronymDefinition
LEAFLegal Education and Action Fund
LEAFLaw Enforcement & Armed Forces (apparel)
LEAFLinux Embedded Appliance Firewall
LEAFLeading, Environmentally Friendly, Affordable Family Car (various companies)
LEAFLarge Effective Area Fabric
LEAFLocal Enhancement and Appreciation of Forests (Canada)
LEAFLegal Environmental Assistance Foundation
LEAFLeonardo Education and Art Forum (International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology)
LEAFLaw Enforcement Access Field
LEAFLinking and Exploring Authority Files
LEAFLettinga Associates Foundation
LEAFLakshmi Energy and Foods (India)
LEAFLeaders in Environmentally Accountable Foodservice (Canada)
LEAFLaw Enforcement Assistance Fund (Colorado)
LEAFLarge Effective Area Fiber (Corning)
LEAFLeading, Environmentally Friendly, Affordable Family Vehicle (Nissan)
LEAFLearning and Ecological Activities Foundation for Children (est. 1998; Japan)
LEAFLaser Electron Accelerator Facility (BNL)
LEAFLaser Environmental Airborne Fluorosensor
LEAFLisgar Environmental Action Force
LEAFLake Elsinore Animal Friends
LEAFLife Energy and Future
LEAFLogistics Education Assistance Fund
LEAFLaw Enforcement Analysis Facility
LEAFLudlow Education Assistance Fund
LEAFLow Energy Absorption Forum

leaf


Related to leaf: leaves
  • all
  • noun
  • verb
  • phrase

Synonyms for leaf

noun frond

Synonyms

  • frond
  • flag
  • needle
  • pad
  • blade
  • bract
  • cotyledon
  • foliole

noun page

Synonyms

  • page
  • sheet
  • folio

phrase leaf through something

Synonyms

  • skim
  • glance
  • scan
  • browse
  • look through
  • dip into
  • flick through
  • flip through
  • thumb through
  • riffle

phrase turn over a new leaf

Synonyms

  • reform
  • change
  • improve
  • amend
  • make a fresh start
  • begin anew
  • change your ways
  • mend your ways

Synonyms for leaf

verb to look through reading matter casually

Synonyms

  • browse
  • dip into
  • flip through
  • glance at
  • riffle
  • run through
  • scan
  • skim
  • thumb

Synonyms for leaf

noun the main organ of photosynthesis and transpiration in higher plants

Synonyms

  • foliage
  • leafage

Related Words

  • venation
  • cataphyll
  • floral leaf
  • dandelion green
  • pitcher
  • plant organ
  • sporophyl
  • sporophyll
  • parenchyma
  • blade
  • leaf blade
  • amplexicaul leaf
  • greenery
  • verdure
  • leaflet
  • frond
  • pad
  • scale leaf
  • scale
  • fig leaf
  • simple leaf
  • compound leaf
  • entire leaf
  • crenate leaf
  • serrate leaf
  • dentate leaf
  • emarginate leaf
  • erose leaf
  • runcinate leaf
  • lobed leaf
  • lobe
  • parallel-veined leaf
  • parted leaf
  • prickly-edged leaf
  • rosette
  • leaf form
  • leaf shape

noun a sheet of any written or printed material (especially in a manuscript or book)

Synonyms

  • folio

Related Words

  • piece of paper
  • sheet of paper
  • sheet
  • flyleaf
  • interleaf
  • page
  • black and white
  • written communication
  • written language

noun hinged or detachable flat section (as of a table or door)

Related Words

  • dinner table
  • drop-leaf
  • segment
  • section

verb look through a book or other written material

Synonyms

  • riff
  • riffle
  • thumb
  • flick
  • flip

Related Words

  • peruse

verb turn over pages

Related Words

  • turn over
  • turn

verb produce leaves, of plants

Related Words

  • acquire
  • develop
  • produce
  • grow
  • get
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