Such a section is shown by Figure 3b; through the translucent hyaline cartilage the utriculus and horizontal canal can be darkly seen.
The hyaline cellular ground substance, carrying the glycogen, could not under any circumstances be stained, but the cell-granules above mentioned stained easily with all kinds of dyes.
All the reproductive individuals, which are placed in the lower part of the body, are of a perfect hyaline white.
The spherical glands were still white, but their utricles were broken up into three or four small hyaline spheres, with an irregularly contracted mass in the middle of the basal part.
On the other hand, the contents of the larger spherical glands often separated into small hyaline globules or irregularly shaped masses, which changed their forms very slowly and ultimately coalesced, forming a central shrunken mass.
Many of the points on the infolded rims also had their lining of protoplasm similarly shrunk, and contained spherical granules of hyaline matter.
These processes are formed of very delicate membrane lined with a layer of protoplasm; and they sometimes contain aggregated globules of hyaline matter.
Hymenium on the surface of the gleba which is enclosed within the peridium up to the maturity of the spores or longer; spores continuous, sphæroid or ellipsoid, hyaline or colored.
The portion covering the hyaline cartilage of the navicular bone has lost its peculiar pearl-blue shimmer, and become a dirty yellow.
Filling up a large part of the hollow of the optic cup is seen a hyaline mass, the rudiment of the hyaloid membrane, and of the coagulum of the vitreous humour, y.
The hyalinecartilage of the vertebral region forms a vertebral body in which calcification may to some extent take place.
This tube consists of a peculiar form of fibrous tissue rather than true cartilage, though part of it subsequently becomes hyaline cartilage.
The remnants of the cells with their nuclei form a sheath round the hyaline axis (fig.
These become larger and larger, and finally, after pushing the remnants of the cells with their nuclei to the sides, coalesce together to form a continuous axis of hyaline substance.
In the former ossification directly sets in without the sheath acquiring the character of hyaline cartilage (Goette, 419).
In the caves of Perigord were also found fragments of hyaline quartz, which must have been brought from the Alps or the Pyrenees.
A minute form without pseudopodial processes, extremely hyaline in appearance, and characterized by rapid flowing in one direction.
These are somewhat hyaline and are closely approximated, giving the impression of a tight-fitting crenulate casing about the lower half.
Unlike the fresh-water variety, this one has no hyaline margin nor hyaline caudal region, and the contractile vacuole is double or multiple on the dorsal side near the posterior end.
The pseudopodia are lobose, sometimes absent, the body then progressing by a flowing movement; the body consists of ectoplasm and endoplasm, the latter being granular and internal, the former hyaline and external.
As a result of this local thickening, the body is surrounded by a thin hyaline margin.
The walls of this tube are thicker than the rest of the shell, and in optical section the effect is that of two hyaline bars extending into the body protoplasm.
The chitinous shell is hyaline and plastic to a slight extent, so that the body is capable of some change in shape.
The most characteristic feature is the presence of a broad, creeping sole, membranous in nature andhyaline in appearance.
Movement is slow and creeping, with a peculiar method of contracting the more hyaline edge, which may turn upward or around a foreign object.
The hyaline cartilage forms the early state of most of the bones, and is also a permanent coating for the articular ends of long bones.
It is best seen in hyaline cartilage, where it has a glossy appearance.
The articular surfaces are covered with a thin layer of hyaline cartilage, and are retained in apposition by the tension of ligaments and of the muscles surrounding the joint.
Covering this mass of detritus there is frequently, as Aschoff and Koch have emphasized, more or less protective fibrin which has undergone some hyaline or connective-tissue organization.
Hemorrhagic infarcts also have been described, and Sato and Nambu report hyaline degeneration of the blood-vessel walls.
Hyaline degeneration has also been described, but is believed to result from secondary infections and not to be an intrinsic lesion of scurvy (Sato and Nambu, Aschoff and Koch).
Its normal form is that of branched, slender, entangled, anastomosing, hyaline threads.
In Asterosporium the spores are stellate, whilst in Pestalozzia they are septate, with a permanent peduncle, and crested above with two or three hyaline appendages.
The spherical bodies, or perithecia, were seated on a plentiful hyaline mycelium.
These are either hyaline or coloured of some shade of brown.
On one occasion, a very immature condition was examined, containing simple beaded, hyaline bodies, attached to each other by a short neck.
In the interior of the receptacles, pear-shaped or ovate asci are formed in clusters, attached together at the base, and containing two or morehyaline sporidia.
In the species of Lecythea themselves will be found, as De Bary[C] has shown, hyaline cysts of a larger size, which surround the pseudospores in the pustules in which they are developed.
Most of these bodies are so minute, delicate, and hyaline that the difficulties in the way of tracing them in their relations to the bodies with which they are associated are very great.
E] Hyaline sporidia occasionally exhibit a delicate bristle-like appendage at each extremity, as in the Valsa thelebola, or with two additional cilia at the central constriction, as in Valsa taleola.
As noteworthy may be mentioned the sporidia of Melanconis lanciformis, those of Valsa profusa, and some species of Massaria, the latter being at first invested with a hyaline coat.
The interior of the perithecium is occupied by a gelatinous nucleus, consisting of elongated cylindrical asci, each enclosing eight globosehyaline sporidia, with slender branched paraphyses.
The fully-matured Bulgaria develops on its hymenium clavate delicate asci, each enclosing eight elongated hyaline sporidia, so that we have three forms of fruit belonging to the same fungus, viz.
Cephalis very small, spherical, hyaline without pores and internal stricture, with a very short, rudimentary horn.
Mouth constricted, one-third as broad as the thorax, with an internal diaphragm and a narrow hyaline peristome.
Mouth constricted, nearly half as broad as the thorax, with a broad hyaline peristome.
Mouth constricted, about half as broad as the thorax, with a broad hyaline peristome.
The dry shell of the Tuscarorida is not hyaline and transparent as is usual in the other Radiolaria, but perfectly opaque, milk-white or yellowish-white.
Constricted mouth as broad as the subspherical, hyaline cephalis.
Shell three-sided pyramidal, with three broad and longhyaline wings, which are prolonged from the collar stricture almost to the basal end, with three diverging edges.
The central capsule is quite simple, ovate or nearly spherical, and included in a voluminous hyaline calymma, which contains no large alveoles.
Shell three-sided prismatic, with three broad and long hyaline wings, which are prolonged from the collar stricture almost to the basal end, with three parallel edges.
Mouth constricted, with a hyaline peristome, half as broad as the thorax.
Ventral part hyaline except at the ends, which are obliquely striated, with short, punctate lines.
At the border, linear hyaline spaces occur at somewhat irregular intervals between the moniliform striae owing to the termination of certain radial rows before they reach the circumference.
Valve orbicular or sub-orbicular, with costae or punctate rays converging from the circumference toward the hyaline centre, which sometimes appears like a pseudoraphe.
In the figure the subulatehyaline spaces at the border are, in some instances, wider than usual.
Valve linear, elliptical, or elliptical-lanceolate, divided by two or more median and two terminal costae or with a central and two terminal hyaline spaces.
Valve lanceolate, tapering to the sub-acute, rostrate or slightly capitate apices; dilated at the centralhyaline space; pseudoraphe distinct.
Valve with a hyaline excentric space from which proceed, usually in six directions, rows of polygonal markings decreasing toward the narrow, coarsely striated border, the rows appearing convex toward the centre.
Hyaline interspaces at the origin of the shorter rows, but not at equal intervals.
Centre faintly granulate, the outer border of which is encircled by 10-12 puncta, each of which is surrounded by a small hyaline space.
Klein found increase of nuclei (probably epithelial) upon the glomeruli and hyaline degeneration of the intima of minute arteries, especially marked in the afferent arterioles of the Malpighian bodies.
He remarks also that he observed hyaline degeneration of the intima of arteries in the spleen.
Certain of the conditions now regarded as indicative of a coagulative necrosis or a hyaline degeneration were previously described by Wagner as the result of a croupous or fibrinous metamorphosis.
As the hyaline appearances are a frequent result of coagulative necrosis, these terms are frequently used to indicate the same condition, according as the optical or etiological features are uppermost in the mind of the observer.
The intima of these vessels was in places so swollen as to resemble cylindrical or spindle-shaped hyaline masses, and cause narrowing of the lumina of the vessels in which this degeneration occurred.
Klein observed in some specimens so great hyaline degeneration of the capillaries of the Malpighian bodies that circulation through them was obstructed.
The hyaline degeneration of muscular fibre is found in certain febrile diseases, as typhoid and typhus fevers, scarlatina, variola, and cerebro-spinal meningitis.
These myophaena or myonema form, in many of the infusoria, both ciliata and flagellata, a special thin layer of parallel or crossed fibres underneath the exoplasm or the hyaline skin-layer of the cell.
The outerhyaline layer of protoplasm in a vegetable cell.
The basal substance of the cell nucleus; a hyaline or granular substance, more or less fluid during life, in which the other parts of the nucleus are imbedded.
So Nature shapes her hyaline vesicles and modifies them to serve the needs of the part where they are found.
The stroma is vertical and fleshy, head distinct, hyaline or colored; sporidia repeatedly divided and sub-moniliform.
The upper thin chaffy or hyaline bract which with the glume encloses the flower in Grasses.
Flower with a single very minutehyaline scale next the axis of the spikelet; bristles none.
Pod mostly globular or inflated, with a broad orbicular to ovate hyaline partition nerved to the middle, the hemispherical or convex thin valves nerveless.
Fruit ovate or obovate, covered with little hyaline scales or tubercles, with no ribs, and usually 5 slender oil-tubes on each carpel.
The tail is provided with an axial rod of hyaline connective tissue, like the notochord of the tail of a larval Ascidian, and is frequently provided with membranous expansions.
Between the epiblast cells and the hypoblast cells which line the gastrula cavity there arises a hyaline structureless layer, which is more closely attached to the epiblast than to the hypoblast, and is probably derived from the former.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "hyaline" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.