Glabrous, a portion of each joint of the stem glutinous; flowers pink.
Spikelets of a single perfect or unisexual or rudimentary flower, in jointed spikes, in pairs at each joint, mostly imbedded in the thick rhachis.
Each joint has a vascular joint occupying the middle part, which is composed of a longitudinal canal, from which a great number of lateral canals branch off at right angles.
The body is composed of a great number of distinct pieces articulated together, each joint having an organ by which it attaches itself to the neighbouring part of the inner court of the intestine.
The alimentary canal passes along each side of the animal, sending a cross canal over the bottom of each joint, which connects the two lateral canals together.
If we consider the individual joints as distinct beings, it is so; and when we reflect upon the power of individuality given to each joint, it makes this conjecture the more probable.
The tibia and tarsus of the front legs are marked with a narrow red ring at the base and a wider ring near the end of each joint.
The palpi are bright orange yellow, with the tibial hook black and a black spot on the inner side of each joint.
The legs are light yellow and translucent, indistinctly ringed with brown at the base and, near the tip of each joint, all covered with greenish white hairs.
The legs are marked with indistinct dark rings, two or three to each joint.
The spikelets are usually arranged in pairs at each joint, one sessile and the other stalked.
The rachis is herbaceous, broad flexuous, jointed and bearing at each joint a solitary globose cluster of two or three perfect 1-flowered glabrous spikelets surrounded by many short spinescent glumes of imperfect ones.
The spikelets are densely imbricate, binate at each joint, the upper being shortly pedicelled and the lower sessile or subsessile.
In the first place, a sufficient quantity of the connecting ligament at each joint must be left to hold the two bones together in proper shape when the specimen dries.
Of course they require to be wired together at the joints, with two wires at each joint, so that the space between them may be channelled out with a gouge to receive the leg iron.
In a full-grown elephant the leg bones are so large it is necessary to cut the ligaments at each joint, so that the scapula, humerus, radius and ulna, and foot may each be handled separately.
In a two-dimensional frame, each joint may be conceived as consisting of a small cylindrical pin fitting accurately and smoothly into holes drilled through the members which it connects.
By examining the senses in which the respective forces act at each joint we can ascertain which members are in tension and which are in thrust; in fig.
How many leaves are there at each joint of stem after the first pair?
Coming now to the question as to the number of leaves at each joint of the stem, the Morning-Glory, Sunflower, and Bean will present no difficulty, but probably all the pupils will be puzzled by the Pea.
Each joint is, in fact, in timber bridge construction a source of serious weakness to a degree which has no parallel in well-designed metallic bridges.
If they are sufficiently accommodating to give freely, to a mean extent, as between the top and bottom of each joint, of 1/29 inch, these results will disappear.
Flowers solitary or in pairs at each joint of the spike =Water Milfoil, Myriophyllum alternifolium.
Spikelets in pairs at each joint, forming a dense spike (Wild Rye) --27.
Spikelets single at each joint, forming a loose, open or interrupted spike --28.
A) consists of a central jointed axis with circles of leaves at each joint or node.
C) is distinctly jointed, bearing at each joint a toothed sheath, best seen in the younger portions, as they are apt to be destroyed in the older parts.
Pores regular, circular, forming three or four transverse rows in each joint.
Each joint (excepting the first and the last) bears three lateral, nearly horizontal spines, and the bases of all the spines are connected by three longitudinal, divergent ribs.
Pores subregular, square, in three to four transverse rows on each joint, half as large in the three wings as in the joints.
In the delicate and loose lattice-work of each wing is a longitudinal series of six large, ovate apertures, one on each joint.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "each joint" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.