A genus composed of species of Nayades, distinguished by their alated dorsal margins, and lamellated lateral teeth.
When the layers of which a shell is composed, instead of being compacted into a solid mass, are separated, overlying each other in the manner of tiles, with the edges prominent, the structure is said to be lamellated or foliaceous.
I hope that I may not be misconstrued into saying that the progenitors of whales did actually possess mouths lamellated like the beak of a duck.
In answer, it may be asked, why should not the early progenitors of the whales with baleen have possessed a mouth constructed something like the lamellated beak of a duck?
Here also appeared the great oak with lamellated acorns, which I had not seen in the drier valleys to the westward; with many other Dorjiling trees and shrubs.
You have doubtless observed that the lamellated clava of the antennae of the common cockchafer is much longer and more conspicuous in some individuals than in others--the long clava belongs to the male[802].
In insects that have a knob at the end of these organs, whether lamellated or perfoliate, this down is often confined to it, or to its intermediate joints, and seems intermixed with nervous papillae.
Those with antennae which terminate in a lamellated clava (Scarabaeus L.
In pectinated or lamellated antennae, the branch is usually a lateral process of the joint from which it issues; but in Phengodes (Lampyris plumosa L.
Eight tropical spines of similar form, but only half as large, and with a very large, extremely prominent, lamellated leaf-cross.
In the system this would come at no great distance from the genus Serica, the compound lamellated joints are, I believe, the first noticed amongst Phyllophagous Coleoptera.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "lamellated" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: filmy; foliated; laminated; layered; leafy; membranous; stratified