Noun
A microscopic form of life; an animal or vegetable organism microscopic size.
Source: Webster's dictionaryAnne Bradford Townsend, The Cathars of Languedoc as heretics: From the Perspectives of Five Contemporary Scholars, page 147 (UMI Microform, ProQuest, 2008). Source: Internet
He did not foresee the digital technology that would follow decades later to replace analog microform with digital imaging, storage, and transmission media. Source: Internet
New Yorkers take advantage of the Milstein Microform Reading Room at the NYPL’s Stephen A. Schwarzman Building. Source: Internet
The Abstracting and Indexing periodicals, Microform and CD-ROM databases, technical reports, Standards and thesis are in the library. Source: Internet
John Benjamin Dancer of Manchester invented microphotography in 1839, which would lead to microform in the 1920s. Source: Internet