ostracoderm

noun

os·​tra·​co·​derm ˈä-strə-kō-ˌdərm How to pronounce ostracoderm (audio)
ä-ˈstra-kə-
: any of various primitive, extinct jawless fish (class Agnatha) of the Lower Paleozoic with a bony covering of plates or scales serving as a protective armor and which on the broad head usually form a bony shield of fused plates

Note: Distant relatives of the hagfish and lampreys, ostracoderms were typically less than 12 inches (30.5 centimeters) long. Unlike earlier vertebrates using the gills for both feeding and breathing, ostracoderms were the first known forms to use the gills exclusively for respiration.

Word History

Etymology

from the base of New Latin Ostracodermi, subclass name, after earlier Ostracoderma, barnacle family, both formed from adaptations of Greek ostrakódermos "with a shell like a potsherd, hard-shelled," from óstrakon "earthen pot, potsherd, hard shell of a mollusk or tortoise" + -o- -o- + -dermos "having skin (of the kind specified)," adjective derivative of dermat-, dérma "skin" — more at ostracon, derm-

First Known Use

1890, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of ostracoderm was in 1890

Dictionary Entries Near ostracoderm

Cite this Entry

“Ostracoderm.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ostracoderm. Accessed 21 Nov. 2024.

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