| laver | The fronds of certain marine algae used as food, and for making a sauce called laver sauce. Green laver is the Ulva latissima; purlpe laver, Porphyra laciniata and P. Vulgaris. It is prepared by stewing, either alone or with other vegetables, and with various condiments; called also sloke, or sloakan. <botany> Mountain laver, a reddish gelatinous alga of the genus Palmella, found on the sides of mountains Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| Laverania | Old generic name for malaria-causing and other haematozoan protozoa. Laverania falciparum is a distinctive generic name for Plasmodium falciparum, and is preferred by some who believe that crescentic gametocytes should be the basis for classifying the causal agent of falciparum malaria in a separate genus. See: Plasmodium, Haemoproteus. Origin: C. Laveran, Fr. Protozoologist and Nobel laureate, 1845-1922 (05 Mar 2000) |
| Laveran |
Charles Louis Alphonse, 18451922. French physician and parasitologist; winner of the Nobel prize for medicine or physiology in 1907 for his discoveries of hematozoa, protozoa, and trypanosomes and their role in causing disease, and for his discovery of the malarial parasite Plasmodium.
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| laver | seaweed with edible translucent crinkly green fronds |
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| laver | edible red seaweeds |
| laver | (Old Testament) large basin used by a priest in an ancient Jewish Temple to perform ritual ablutions |
| laver | Australian tennis player who in 1962 was the second man to win the Australian and French and English and United States singles titles in the same year |
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