What is the Meaning & Definition of rhizomes

At the behest of Botany, the Rhizome is a horizontal underground stem containing egg yolks, grows horizontally and roots and their knots herbaceous shoots which are born. While the rhizomes grow indefinite, dying in the course of a year, its oldest parts, too, produced each year, new and can thereby shoots cover important areas of land; Meanwhile, the thickened branches often have short internodes.
According to the growth and branching rhizomes that can be classified in the following way: sympodial (are those in which each portion corresponds to the development of successive axillary buds; and the terminal bud of each portion will be that produces the epigeo outbreak) and monopodiales (in these terminal bud continues indefinite Rhizome growth as axillary buds are causing outbreaks epigeal. This type tends to be very characteristic of those weeds or invasive species).
It should be noted, that the rhizomes can be divided into pieces that have at least one egg yolk each, stand separately and plants containing them are perennial losing their aerial parts in cold climates and retain only the underground organ that stores nutrients for next season
It is common of mountain plants and where prevailing cold weather, for example, the common Lily.
On the other hand, Rhizome is a philosophical concept developed by the French philosophers Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari project capitalism and schizophrenia. There, the Rhizome is a descriptive model in which the Organization of the elements does not follow the lines of hierarchical subordination, i.e., presenting a base or root that gives rise to multiple branches, and can any of the involved elements influencing the other. The concept is inspired of course in Botany from the same conception.