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Example sentences for "malar"

Lexicographically close words:
malaise; malam; malamute; malamutes; malapert; malaria; malarial; malarious; malate; malcontent
  1. Nor is the malar bone a guide, for this might easily be mistaken for the tuberosity of the ischium, or even for the shoulder.

  2. Brightly shone the light of chandelier and gueridon through the plate glass windows of the royal palace on the Ritterholm, and most beautifully was its brilliancy reflected by the quiet waters of the Malar lake.

  3. Similarly the black malar stripe of auratus is in all probability recessive to the red malar stripe of cafer and I imagine the pigments concerned are comparable with those in the Gouldian Finch (Poephila gouldiae) of Australia.

  4. Sometimes, however, there is a mixture of orange or reddish quills, while the malar stripe remains normal.

  5. It would be interesting to know whether the red of the malar stripes in Colaptes is a pigment of the same nature as the red of the quills.

  6. A bird may have the general colouration of true cafer combined with a well-developed nuchal crescent, or nearly pure auratus with the red malar stripes of a cafer.

  7. As regards the malar patch, which can only be determined properly in the adult males, 1 was red, 1 was approximately red, 2 intermediate.

  8. It is not much easier to suppose the ancestor to have been a nondescript, with a compromise between the developed characters of each, with quills buff, malar stripes neither black nor red, with a trace of nuchal crescent, and so on.

  9. Among all the birds I have seen in America or in England I have not yet found one having the malar patches black without any nuchal crescent.

  10. On the other hand the blackness or redness of the malar patches is, I think, as a rule nearly symmetrical.

  11. Yesterday we steamed down Lake Malar to Gripsholm, a very quaint castle with domed red towers, full of ancient pictures, and with the wonderful old room and bed where Queen Catherine Jagellonica (delightful name!

  12. Adult female: Similar, but black on forehead, and black instead of red malar stripes.

  13. As the bird alternately squints and stares from the brush, note the rich warbler olive of his upperparts, the gorgeous yellow of the throat and breast, the white brow-stripe and the malar dash, offset by black and darker olive.

  14. Odin took up his residence at the Malar lake, at the place now called Sigtun.

  15. And in the Malar Lake the bays correspond to the capes in Seeland.

  16. And where the land had been taken away became afterward a sea, which in Sweden is now called Logrinn (the Lake, the Malar Lake in Sweden).

  17. Frontal malar projection is also common but more often moderately so; 87 per cent show medium projection and 12 per cent are pronounced.

  18. The facial contours generally include lateral malar projection; two-thirds show a pronounced condition and the balance are medium.

  19. First, we passed through the Malar Lake --one of the most beautiful pieces of water in the world.

  20. He adduces, as another instance, the malar bone, which, in some of the Quadrumana and other mammals, normally consists of two portions.

  21. Laurillard remarks, that as he has found a complete similarity in the form, proportions, and connexion of the two malar bones in several human subjects and in certain apes, he cannot consider this disposition of the parts as simply accidental.

  22. Here again he comes to the same conclusion as in the analogous case of the malar bones.

  23. Young birds have the abdomen white, and the malar stripe entirely black or with a few red spots.

  24. Has the forehead and crown black; the malar region white, striped with black.

  25. Differs from the adult of the same sex in having the white of the throat and fore neck duller, and the striations less intense black; the feathers of the malar region white, with dusky bases, a few assuming the red tips.

  26. At the outer end of the margin is its junction with the malar bone, and this easily felt point is known as the external angular process.

  27. The zygoma may be felt running back from the malar bone to just in front of the ear, and two fingers' breadth above the middle of it marks the pterion, a very important point in the localization of intracranial structures.

  28. The malar he notices under the name of zygomatic bone; and he describes at length the upper maxillary and nasal bones, and the connexion of the former with the sphenoid.

  29. The articulation with the malar bone at the upper angle of the incision through the skin.

  30. A) of the skin must extend from the angle of the mouth upwards and outwards in a slightly curved direction with its convexity downwards, as far on the malar bone as half an inch outside of the outer angle of the eye.

  31. Defn: Of or pertaining to both the temple and the region of the malar bone; as, the temporomalar nerve.

  32. Defn: Of or pertaining to the region of the cheek bone, or to the malar bone; jugal.

  33. From unknown causes the supra-orbital process of the frontal bones and the free end of the malar bones have increased in breadth; and in the larger breeds the occipital foramen is generally much less deeply notched than in wild rabbits.

  34. In order to show these in dissection, the malar must be cut away, and the eye and glands of the orbit removed.

  35. Part of Zygomatic Arch, showing the projecting end of the malar bone and the auditory meatus: of natural size.

  36. In Birds this malar or cheek bone is a slender rod, but in these Pterodactyles it is a vertical plate, which is blended with the bone named the quadrate bone, which makes the articulation with the lower jaw in all oviparous animals.

  37. The post-frontal region also is prolonged downward almost as far as the malar bar, as though to show that a bird might have its orbital circle formed in the same way and by the same bones as in Pterodactylus.

  38. In birds there is no conspicuous temporal fossa, because the malar bar is a slender rod of bone in a line with the lower end of the quadrate bone.

  39. The lower arch includes the malar bone, which is in front in the single arch of mammals.

  40. When a separate antorbital vacuity exists, it is bordered by the maxillary bone in front, and by the malar bone behind.

  41. It is made by the malar bone extending from the back of the orbit and the process of bone, called the zygomatic process, extending forward from the articulation of the jaw, which arches out to meet the malar bone.

  42. In the Ground Hornbill and the Shoebill the lachrymal bones in front of the orbits of the eyes grow down to meet the malar bars without uniting with them.

  43. In Dimorphodon the malar bone is entirely removed from the quadrate, but in Pterodactylus it meets its articular end.

  44. The back of the head of Archaeopteryx is imperfectly preserved in the region of the quadrate bone, malar arch, and temporal vacuity.

  45. In Dimorphodon its hinder border is partly covered by the descending edge of the malar process which these animals develop in common with some Dinosaurs, and some Anomodont reptiles, and many of the lower mammals.

  46. Thus far the chief difference in the Pterodactyle skull from that of a bird is in the way in which the malar arch is prolonged backward on each side.

  47. The handle of the needle is tilted against the cartilaginous septum, while the point is directed towards the malar eminence.

  48. A chisel is first driven through the superior maxilla, close to its junction with the malar bone, but avoiding the infra-orbital nerve, and the section is carried downwards across the canine fossa until it reaches the alveolar border (Fig.

  49. A second incision, starting from the same spot above, is next carried round the lower margin of the orbit and outwards as far as the malar eminence (Fig.

  50. Female similar, but anterior half of head black, and no scarlet malar patch.

  51. The malar or cheek bones are joined to the upper jawbones, and help form the sockets of the eyes.

  52. The arch formed by the malar bone and the zygomatic process of the temporal bone.

  53. In this illustration, B represents the occipital protuberance, and A the junction of the frontal and malar bones at the external angle of the eye.

  54. He recommends perforating the antrum immediately above the first molars, or rather between it and the malar bone.


  55. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "malar" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.