Diplopia, dip′-lō′pi-a, n. double vision.
Diplozoon, dip-lō-zō′on, n. a remarkable flat worm or Trematode, consisting of two organisms fused together. [Gr. diploos, double, zōon, an animal.]
Dipnoi, dip′noi, n.pl. the lung fishes.—adj. Dip′noous, having both lungs and gills.
Dipody, dip′o-di, n. (pros.) a double foot.
Dipolar, dī-pō′lar, adj. having two poles.
Dipper, dip′ėr, n. a genus of birds in the Thrush family that find their food by diving into streams or lakes: a kind of Baptist or Dunker.
Diprismatic, dī-priz-mat′ik, adj. doubly prismatic.
Dipsacus, dip′sa-kus, n. the teasel. [Gr. dipsa, thirst, because the leaf-axils hold water.]
Dipsas, dip′sas, n. a snake whose bite was believed to cause intense thirst: a genus of non-venomous snakes. [Gr. dipsas—dipsa, thirst.]
Dipsector, dip′sekt-or, n. an instrument for observing the dip of the horizon. [Dip and sector.]