: any of a phylum (Cnidaria) of radially symmetrical, aquatic, invertebrate animals that have a hollow digestive cavity opening to the outside by a single opening surrounded by one or more nematocyst-studded whorls of tentacles, that occur as single or colonial sessile, typically columnar polyps or usually free-swimming, bell-shaped medusae, and that include the corals, sea anemones, jellyfishes, hydras, and Portuguese man-of-wars
Welcome to the world of cnidarians—a family of sea anemones, jellyfish and other marine invertebrates that kill their enemies and prey by firing poisonous, microscopic projectiles called nematocysts.Rick Weiss

called also coelenterate

cnidarian adjective

Examples of cnidarian in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web
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Such cells only exist on one group of aquatic invertebrates, called cnidarians. Kerry Breen, CBS News, 23 Apr. 2026 But closer analysis revealed it was made of fibrous layers packed with stinging cells, pointing to a connection with cnidarians, the group that includes corals and anemones. Stephen Sorace, FOXNews.com, 23 Apr. 2026 The team observed the active and inactive periods of these cnidarians using infrared cameras and movement-tracking software. New Atlas, 24 Jan. 2026 These include cnidarians, a group of radially symmetric organisms including present-day jellyfish. ArsTechnica, 2 Apr. 2026 See All Example Sentences for cnidarian

Word History

Etymology

New Latin Cnidaria, phylum name (from Greek knī́dē "nettle, sea nettle"—of uncertain origin— + Latin -āria, neuter plural of -ārius -ary entry 2) + -an entry 1

Note: The taxon Cnidaria is based ultimately on French cnidaire, a vernacular designation for a sub-class used by H. Milne Edwards in Histoire naturelle des coralliaires ou polypes proprements dits, tome 1 (Paris, 1857), p. 95. Milne Edwards alludes to use of Greek knī́dē for a sea nettle by Aristotle in Historia animalium, Book 5. The Greek noun has been associated with the verb knízein "to scratch, chop up, provoke" (perhaps from an Indo-European base *knid-), but the vowel length in knī́dē has no good explanation.

First Known Use

1894, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of cnidarian was in 1894

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Cite this Entry

“Cnidarian.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/cnidarian. Accessed 7 Jul. 2026.

Kids Definition

cnidarian

noun
cnidarian adjective

Medical Definition

cnidarian

noun
cnidarian adjective

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