0 past simple and past participle of flagellate
1 to whip yourself or someone else, especially as a religious act
Blastocystis shows a variety of cell forms during its life-cycle, but no flagellated forms have ever been identified.
After entering the host, the parasites emerge from the cysts, and adhere to the epithelial brush border of the small intestine as flagellated trophozoites.
The landowner is fiscally flagellated.
The retina comprises numerous pigment cells and photoreceptors; the latter are easily modified flagellated cells, whose flagellum membranes carry a photosensitive pigment on their surface.
In leuconoid sponges the atrium is replaced by a proliferation of mesohyl and a complex network of water channels and flagellated chambers.
The zygote is not flagellated, and it serves as a dormant form of the species in the soil.
It is highly flagellated, motile, cell wall-deficient, thermoacidophilic, facultatively anaerobic and organotrophic.
The ends are called "flame cells" (if ciliated) or "solenocytes" (if flagellated); they function in osmoregulation and ionoregulation.