| Dictionary, Encyclopedia and Thesaurus - The Free Dictionary 1,762,837,968 visitors served. |
|
Dictionary/ thesaurus | Medical dictionary | Legal dictionary | Financial dictionary | Acronyms | Idioms | Encyclopedia | Wikipedia encyclopedia | ? |
shell |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Idioms, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.01 sec. |
|
shell, in zoology, hard outer covering secreted by an animal for protection. It is also called the test, crust, or carapace. The term usually refers to the calcareous shells of the many species of mollusk but is also applied to the exoskeleton of the crab and other crustaceans, to the bony covering of the turtle, and to the hard exterior of a bird's egg. People have made use of mollusk shells since early times as receptacles for food and water, as currency (see shell money shell money, medium of exchange consisting of shells, the most widely distributed type of ancient currency. Shells are particularly useful as money because they may be strung in long strips of proportionate value or they may be used to provide a single unit value in ..... Click the link for more information. ), and for ornament. The scientific study of shells is called conchology. BibliographySee P. A. Morris, A Field Guide to the Shells (of the Atlantic coast, 1973; the Pacific, 1974); J. M. Eisenberg, A Collector's Guide to Seashells of the World (1980); The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Shells (1981); S. D. Romashko, The Shell Book (1984); K. R. Wye, The Simon & Schuster Pocket Guide to Shells of the World (1989). shellArtillery projectile, cartridge case, or shotgun cartridge. It originated in the 15th century as a container for metal or stone shot, dispersed when the container burst after leaving the gun. Explosive shells, in use by the 16th century, were hollow cast-iron balls filled with gunpowder and lit by a fuse. Until the 18th century, such shells were used only in high-angle fire (including mortars). In the 19th century, shells were adopted for direct-fire artillery, notably in the form of shrapnel. Modern artillery shells consist of a casing (usually steel), a propelling charge, and a bursting charge; the propelling charge is ignited by a primer at the base of the shell and the bursting charge by a fuse in the nose. In rifle, pistol, and machine-gun ammunition, the word usually signifies the brass casing that contains the propulsive charge. In shotgun ammunition, the shell is the entire cartridge, including shot, powder, primer, and case. shellThe outer layer of a program that provides the user interface, or way of commanding the computer. It typically applies to operating systems. In Unix, the Bourne shell was the original command processor, which executes typed-in commands. C shell and Korn shell were developed later. In DOS, the default shell was COMMAND.COM, which also required commands to be typed in. The term often refers only to command line processors in contrast to a graphical interface. shell 1. the protective calcareous or membranous outer layer of an egg, esp a bird's egg 2. the hard outer covering of many molluscs that is secreted by the mantle 3. any other hard outer layer, such as the exoskeleton of many arthropods 4. the hard outer layer of some fruits, esp of nuts 5. Rowing a very light narrow racing boat 6. the basic structural case of something, such as a machine, vehicle, etc. 7. Physics a. a class of electron orbits in an atom in which the electrons have the same principal quantum number and orbital angular momentum quantum number and differences in their energy are small compared with differences in energy between shells b. an analogous energy state of nucleons in certain theories (shell models) of the structure of the atomic nucleus 8. Brit (in some schools) a class or form shell [shel] (architecture) A reinforced concrete arched or domed roof used over unpartitioned areas. (building construction) A building without internal partitions or furnishings. (computer science) A program that provides an interface between a user and the computer's operating system by reading commands and sending them to the operating system for execution. (design engineering) The case of a pulley block. A thin hollow cylinder. A hollow hemispherical structure. The outer wall of a vessel or tank. (geology) The crust of the earth. A thin hard layer of rock. (graphic arts) An engraved roller made of copper and used in calico printing. (metallurgy) The outer wall of a metal mold. The hard layer of sand and thermosetting plastic formed over a pattern and used as a mold wall in shell molding. The metal sleeve remaining when a billet is extruded with a dummy block at smaller diameter. A tubular casting used in preparing seamless drawn tubes. A pierced forging. (ordnance) A hollow metal projectile designed to be projected from a gun, containing or intended to contain a high-explosive, chemical, atomic, or other charge. A shotgun cartridge or a cartridge for artillery of small arms. (physics) A set of energy levels with approximately the same energy in an atom or nucleus. (zoology) A hard, usually calcareous, outer covering on an animal body, as of bivalves and turtles. The hard covering of an egg. Chitinous exoskeleton of certain arthropods.
How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
|
| ? Mentioned in |
|---|
| Encyclopedia |
| Free Tools: |
For surfers:
Free toolbar & extensions |
Word of the Day |
Help
For webmasters: Free content | Linking | Lookup box | Double-click lookup | Partner with us |
|---|