In the nuchal region, this dorsal stripe narrows and splits into left and right branches, which diverge anteriorly to form a lyratepattern on the head.
The black-cock is a still larger bird; the male with a wonderful metallic, steel-blue plumage, and lyrate tail.
They have heavily fringed necks, tufted tails, long lyrate horns in the bucks (fig.
The long face, high crest for the horns, which are ringed, lyrate and more or less strongly angulated, and the moderately long tail, are the distinctive features of the hartebeests.
Antelope, with longish lyrate horns in the male, which are half-ringed.
The horns are lyrate in the male, absent in the female.
The horns are of fair length, ringed, and of lyrate form.
Vilmorin mentions two varieties; one having entire leaves, the other with lyrateor lobed leaves; giving preference, however, to the one with entire leaves.
Small herbs, branched from the base; the leaves chiefly radical, lyrate or toothed; the small heads terminating the naked scapes or branches.
Leaves all lyrate or runcinate, the upper often with a heart-shaped clasping base; panicle larger; achenes distinctly beaked; otherwise as n.
Hornless females would place it among the latter; but lyrate horns, ovine nose, and want of sinus, would give it rather to Gazella, and its singular inguinal purses further ally it to Ant.
The impalla is about the same size as the Grant's gazelle, but has horns of a lyrate shape.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "lyrate" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.