Ca″lyx (kā″lĭks; 277), n.; pl. E. Calyxes (#), L. Calyces (kăl″ĭ‐sēz). [L. calyx, -ycis, fr. Gr. κάλυξ husk, shell, calyx, from the root of καλύπτειν to cover, conceal. Cf. Chalice Helmet.] 1. (Bot.) The covering of a flower. See Flower.
☞ The calyx is usually green and foliaceous, but becomes delicate and petaloid in such flowers as the anemone and the four-o'clock. Each leaf of the calyx is called a sepal.
2. (Anat.) A cuplike division of the pelvis of the kidney, which surrounds one or more of the renal papillæ.