D defs.my
Entry 8 senses Webster, 1913

Species

/spēsh'-ēz/ · Spe·cies · IPA /ˈspiːʃiːz/
01 n. sing. & pl. Visible or sensible presentation; appearance; a sensible percept received by the imagination; an image.
  1. 1.
    Visible or sensible presentation; appearance; a sensible percept received by the imagination; an image.[R.]
    “Wit, . . . the faculty of imagination in the writer, which searches over all the memory for the species or ideas of those things which it designs to represent.” Dryden.
  2. 2.
    A group of individuals agreeing in common attributes, and designated by a common name; a conception subordinated to another conception, called a genus, or generic conception, from which it differs in containing or comprehending more attributes, and extending to fewer individuals. Thus, man is a species, under animal as a genus; and man, in its turn, may be regarded as a genus with respect to European, American, or the like, as species.(Logic) See: man, animal, European, American
  3. 3.
    In science, a more or less permanent group of existing things or beings, associated according to attributes, or properties determined by scientific observation.
  4. 4.
    A sort; a kind; a variety; as, a species of low cunning; a species of generosity; a species of cloth.
  5. 5.
    Coin, or coined silver, gold, or other metal, used as a circulating medium; specie.[Obs.]
    “There was, in the splendor of the Roman empire, a less quantity of current species in Europe than there is now.” Arbuthnot.
  6. 6.
    A public spectacle or exhibition.[Obs.]
  7. 7.
    A component part of a compound medicine; a simple.(Pharmacy)
  8. 8.
    The form or shape given to materials; fashion or shape; form; figure.(Civil Law)
Phrases & compounds
Incipient species — a subspecies, or variety, which is in process of becoming permanent, and thus changing to a true species, usually by isolation in localities from which other varieties are excluded.