Kennosarjojen
Kenno-sarjojen is a Finnish term used in technical discussions to describe a structural motif in which small compartments, often described as kenno (cells or honeycomb-like cavities), are arranged in a repeating series. The expression is most common in histology and botany, where authors characterize tissue or tissue-like networks that resemble a honeycomb in their organization. The term is descriptive rather than functional, and it is typically employed to compare different tissues or developmental stages by their cellular patterning.
Etymology and form: kenno-sarja combines kenno (cell, honeycomb cavity) and sarja (series). Kenno-sarjojen is the genitive
Context and usage: In published Finnish biology and plant morphology texts, kennosarjojen describes tissue regions or
Related terms: kenno (cell or honeycomb cavity), kenno-sarja (singular), kenno-sarjat (nominative plural).
See also: kenno, sarja, kenno-sarja.
Note: As a specialized term, kennosarjojen occurs mainly in Finnish scientific literature and glossaries related to