He said it wouldn't hurt the old cow to wait a while, anyway.
Pileus= convex or nearly plane, at first covered with a red fibrillose tomentum which soon divides into small scales revealing the yellow color of the pileus beneath.
Stem= solid, colored like or paler than the pileus, fibrillose or villose-squamose.
It is hollow, but the cavity small, at first fibrillose and more or less adorned with floccose scales toward the base, but these generally disappear with age, and the primary white color of the stem is apt to become darker with age.
Stem= equal, hollow, covered with a fibrillose bark, naked at the apex, pale reddish.
Young specimens occur which are fibrillose from the veil, not from laceration of the cuticle.
Stem= generally thick, subbulbous, solid, fibrillose or frosted with fine hairs, whitish or colored like the pileus.
Stem= equal or slightly tapering upward, firm, solid, fibrillose or subglabrous, variable in color.
The stem is abundantly furnished with fibrillose rootlets at the base.
Cuticle of pileus torn into downy orfibrillose scales.
Traces of an evanescent fibrillose ring are occasionally found or the fibrils adorn the margin of the cap.
Inocybe is readily distinguished by thefibrillose covering of the pileus, which never has a distinct pellicle, by the veil which is continuous and homogeneous with the fibrils of the pileus, and by the rusty-brown spores.
The pale ochraceous yellow and the veryfibrillose caps and stem will attract the attention of the collector at once.
The stem is hollow, equal, fibrilloseor squamose below the ring, tinged with blue.
Fleshy layer generally peeling off from the segments of the fibrillose layer but usually remaining partially free, as a cup at base of inner peridium.
The stem is colored like the pileus, fibrillose striate, usually slightly curved, stuffed, short, often thickened at the base.
Inocybe is from two Greek words meaning fiber and head; so called from the fibrillose veil, concrete with the cuticle of the pileus, often free at the margin, in the form of a cortina.
The stem is viscid, pale, tough, fibrillose at the base, rooting, becoming hollow.
Pileus and stem floccose or fibrillose at first from the universal veil.
Pileus viscid when moist, innately fibrilloseor squamulose, but not broken up.
Veil adpressedly fibrillose to the stem, not appendiculato-cortinate, almost none, or forming a zone on stem.
Pileus equally fleshy, dry, at first scaly, fibrillose or innately silky, not hygrophanous.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "fibrillose" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.