|
SIDES |
Margins |
|
EDGES |
Margins |
|
LITURATE |
Having indistinct spots, paler at their margins. |
|
BIPECTINATED |
Having two margins toothed like a comb. |
|
|
CURVATIVE |
Having the margins only a little curved; -- said of
leaves. |
|
PANEL |
A sunken compartment with raised margins, molded or
otherwise, as in ceilings, wainscotings, etc. |
|
REDUPLICATE |
Valvate with the margins curved outwardly; -- said of
the /stivation of certain flowers. |
|
BIFID |
Cleft to the middle or slightly beyond the middle; opening
with a cleft; divided by a linear sinus, with straight margins. |
|
|
AQUATIC |
Pertaining to water; growing in water; living in, swimming
in, or frequenting the margins of waters; as, aquatic plants and fowls. |
|
BLEAREYE |
A disease of the eyelids, consisting in chronic
inflammation of the margins, with a gummy secretion of sebaceous
matter. |
|
TONGUE-TIE |
Impeded motion of the tongue because of the shortness
of the fraenum, or of the adhesion of its margins to the gums. |
|
SUTURE |
The line, or seam, formed by the union of two margins in
any part of a plant; as, the ventral suture of a legume. |
|
THAROS |
...ing the
upper surface of the wings variegated with orange and black, the outer
margins black with small white crescents; -- called also pearl
... |
|
VICEROY |
...hia, /
Limenitis, archippus). Its wings are orange-red, with black lines along
the nervures and a row of white spots along the outer margins. Th... |
|
SEDGE |
...rasslike leaves
which are usually rough on the margins and midrib. There are several
hundred species. ... |
|
IMBRICATED |
...cales of fishes;
overlapping each other at the margins, as leaves in aestivation. ... |
|
CAPYBARA |
A large South American rodent (Hydrochaerus capybara)
Living on the margins of lakes and rivers. It is the largest extant
rodent, being about t... |
|
INTRAPETIOLAR |
...d
of the pair of stipules at the base of a petiole when united by those
margins next the petiole, thus seeming to form a single stipule between
... |
|
AMMONITE |
...erous. They differ from the nautili in having the margins of the
septa very much lobed or plaited, and the siphuncle dorsal. Also called
serpent... |