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Example sentences for "cordate"

Lexicographically close words:
corce; cord; corda; cordage; cordata; cordatis; corde; corded; cordelle; cordi
  1. Leaves are amplexicaul and cordate at the base.

  2. The heads are terminal, consisting of yellow, ligulate florets, surrounded by five large cordate bracts.

  3. Both are distinguished by their thick, furrowed, corky bark; and their rough oval-cordate leaves with unequal sides.

  4. Its leaves are cordate and acute, and change either to a bright yellow or a beautiful bronze colour in the autumn.

  5. The leaves are cordate or almost round, divided into five or seven shallow, crenate lobes.

  6. Its leaves are very large, and very similar to those of the Colt's-foot, being cordate and toothed, and appearing after the flowers.

  7. The lower leaves, too, are oblong and stalked, while the upper ones are cordate and half clasp the stem.

  8. Two varieties of this tree occur, one with the leaves and twigs covered with downy hairs, and the other with leaves of an oval-cordate form.

  9. It may also be distinguished by the appendage in the notch, which is cordate in form, and flat.

  10. It has several prostrate stems, from four to eight inches long; and stalked, cordate leaves with irregularly serrate margins.

  11. The lower leaves are ovate, cordate at the base, blunt, often eight or nine inches long; and the upper ones narrow and pointed.

  12. The corolla tube is very short; the style long and persistent; and the fruits are inversely-cordate capsules.

  13. The leaves are opposite, pinnate, with three or five stalked, ovate or cordate leaflets; and the flowers are in loose, axillary or terminal panicles.

  14. The stem-leaves are oval or obovate, entire, shortly-stalked and placed alternately; and the floral leaves are cordate or broadly ovate.

  15. But the angular or striated branches, the long or short petioles, the oval, cordate or reniform leaves, etc.

  16. Cauline leaves sessile, but the base not cordate nor auriculate (except in forms of n.

  17. The cordate pinnules sometimes found here are commoner in Europe.

  18. Leaves cordate at base and cleft into 3 to 5 acute-notched, irregularly toothed lobes, whitish beneath, turning a bright crimson in early autumn.

  19. Leaves large, thin, 3-lobed at the end, cordate at base, finely and sharply doubly serrate.

  20. Leaves decidedly auriculate or cordate at the base.

  21. Leaves ovate rather than lanceolate, sometimes truncate or even cordate at base.

  22. Leaves broadly ovate or oval, rarely cordate at base, smooth above, white-downy beneath, 4 to 6 in.

  23. The base of each tooth exhibits four cordate dental pores.

  24. Therefore the sagittal constriction exists only in the basal half of the inversely cordate shell.

  25. The entire form of this thicket, which in the few species observed was never complete, but always more or less destroyed, is usually probably subspherical or polyhedral, sometimes cordate or kidney-shaped.

  26. On the base of each foot four opposite cordate pores of very unequal size.

  27. These auricles are scantily developed in small fronds; but in larger ones they are more or less prominent, making the base of the frond either cordate or hastate.

  28. The carapace is cordate (heart-shaped), and longer than broad, exclusive of the rostrum.

  29. There is a strongly marked cordate lunule, and hardly any pallial sinus.

  30. A few scattered mangroves, and a leguminous tree, with rough cordate leaves, and large one or two-seeded legumes, were growing on the banks.

  31. In the open ground grew a beautiful tree producing large terminal spikes of yellow flowers, with broad, and slightly cordate leaves; it belongs to the natural order Bignoniaceae.

  32. The first leaves produced by the young plant are linear, the second are sagittate and hastate, the third are rounded-cordate and the next are orbicular.

  33. The densely pubescent petioles and the ciliate margins of the broad cordate leaves at once distinguish this tree from the usually smaller but more common P.

  34. The fruit is flattish, broadly ovate, with a cordate base and sub-acute apex.

  35. The place of attachment is indicated by the short straight line which separates the cordate lobes at the base of the fruit.

  36. The leaves are oval-lance-shaped with a cordate base, and are borne nearly erect on long stalks for some distance above the surface of the water.

  37. Broadly cordate in outline; three-parted; the divisions cleft into linear or oblong segments.

  38. Later in the season, the large cordate leaves are quite conspicuous, and cause people to wonder what may have been the flower of so fine a vine.

  39. Palmately and nearly equally five-lobed; cordate at base; four to twelve inches broad; the lobes acute; densely tomentose beneath.

  40. Ovate; often somewhat cordate at base; acute or obtuse; six to eighteen lines long; obscurely crenate.

  41. The principal features by which it is to be distinguished from the two other British plants of the same species are its ovate or cordate leaves with very short petioles, and the presence of only one or two flowers on each peduncle.

  42. The true Cockles, some few species of which are known to almost every one, constitute the family Cardiadae, so called on account of the cordate or heart-shaped form of the shell as viewed from the anterior or posterior side.

  43. The root-leaves are cordate in form, and the upper ones are sessile and angled, half embracing the stem.

  44. A firm, red, cordate cherry of second quality for table use; ripens in July.

  45. Ox Heart is very commonly used as a class name for the large, meaty varieties of cherries which are cordate in shape.

  46. It is distinguished from Goldgelbe Herzkirsche through its cordate form, lighter color and earlier ripening.

  47. A small, red, obtuse-cordate fruit of fair quality and tender flesh, ripening early in July.

  48. It is therefore safe to conclude that the cordate leaves are inherited forms, and that the lanceolate organs are adaptations to light which may be shown by any individual of the species.

  49. The cordate leaves at the base of the stem were always produced, however, no matter to what intensity of illumination that part of the plant was subjected.

  50. Fructification in racemes directed one way and revolute, with bell-shaped corollas, and cordate leaves like those of Nicotiana rustica; but crenate, and the whole tree prickly.

  51. Leaf-segments obtuse, rounded, or cordate at the base (6-15 dm.

  52. Leaves ovate, rounded or cordate at the base, 2-5 cm.

  53. Leaves broadly ovate to nearly circular, frequently cordate at the base, and always palmately veined or lobed --20.

  54. Stem erect; leaves rounded or somewhat cordate at base, not hastate or sagittate (1-3 dm.

  55. Foliage villous; basal leaves barely cordate or not at all =Small-flowered Crowfoot, Ranunculus micranthus.

  56. Stem-leaves cordate or sagittate at the base and sessile, forming a more or less clasping leaf (3-10 dm.


  57. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "cordate" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.