To this form the terms trichasial and polychasial cyme have been applied; but these are now usually designated cymose umbels.
Small herbs, with short entire stipules connecting the petioles or narrowed bases of the leaves, and cymose or solitary and peduncled flowers.
Chiefly perennial, smooth, and thick-leaved herbs, with the flowers cymose or one-sided.
Perennial herbs, with upright branching stems, opposite mucronate-pointed leaves, a tough fibrous bark, and small and pale cymose flowers on short pedicels.
Erect or often prostrate, the lower clusters at least of pistillate flowers more or less cymose and often in globose heads; bracts thinner, narrow and lax, shorter than the fruit.
Flowers axillary, chiefly in cymose clusters, these often aggregated in terminal spikes or racemes.
Stemless perennials, with runners, and with white cymose flowers on scapes.
Flowers cream color, in a flat cymose head, without involucral scales, terminal on shoots of the year; fruit subglobose, white or dark blue.
Leaves entire, persistent; stamens 9, those of the outer row fertile and united in a column inclosing the pistil; flowers in terminal or axillary cymose panicles.
Flowers cymose in pedunculate spikes or heads; staminodium 0; ovary 1-celled; fruit a capsule.
Defn: A genus of plants, mostly perennial, having succulent leaves andcymose flowers; orpine; stonecrop.
Defn: A genus of shrubs having opposite, petiolate leaves and cymose flowers, several species of which are cultivated as ornamental, as the laurestine and the guelder-rose.
A genus of shrubs having opposite, petiolate leaves and cymose flowers, several species of which are cultivated as ornamental, as the laurestine and the guelder-rose.
A genus of plants, mostly perennial, having succulent leaves and cymose flowers; orpine; stonecrop.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "cymose" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.