Shuswap Indians of British Columbia eat nutlets of pines, i.
Margins of all the leaves sharply serrate all around except at base; nutlets 6-8 mm.
There are five stamens within the tube of the corolla, and the fruit consists of four nutlets enclosed in the persistent calyx.
This plant derives its generic name of Lithospermum from the nature of its fruit, which consists of white, stony nutlets with a smooth and polished surface.
The stamens, of which there are two pairs, project beyond the upper lip of the corolla; and the four nutlets of the fruit are rough and united.
I know this is the result because when the Helmick hybrid bloomed its cluster containing eighteen nutlets would have perished for want of pollen to fertilize them because it had produced no staminate blossoms of its own.
The nutlets are roughened with short, hard points.
The Gilyaks of the Amoor valley in like manner eat the nutlets of the Siberian stone-pine (L.
The Shuswap Indians of British Columbia collect the cones of various sorts of pines and eat the nutlets which they extract from them.
Mice and red squirrels are also fond of the seed-like nutlets of roses, but seldom secure them from the bushes.
To the feathers of a ruffed grouse killed in the molting stage, early in September, were attached fifty or more nutlets of Echinospermum Virginicum Lehm.
The calyx of sage, bergamot, and most other mints, remains dry and stiff, as a cup to hold one to four little round nutlets as they ripen.
On the other hand, their being always apparently flattened in one plane, and the nucleus being seldom, if ever, found denuded of its margin, are arguments in favour of their having been winged nutlets or seeds.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "nutlets" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.