A shrub or rarely a small tree with obovate rounded yellowish leaves and branchlets.
Fruit composed of 2 samaras separable from a small persistent axis, the nut-like carpels compressed laterally, produced on the back into a large chartaceous or coriaceous reticulated obovate wing thickened on the lower margin.
It has large obovate leaves and an egg-shaped fruit from three to five inches long, containing a pleasant-flavored pulp and a single large seed.
All these are low herbs with soft, oval, or obovate leaves, whence the name.
Small trees with crooked branches; bark of old trees exfoliating in irregular plates; twigs smooth; leaves obovate or oval, 5-9 cm.
Small trees with the characteristic bark of the genus; twigs smooth; leaves obovate or oval, 5-11 cm.
Leaves ovate-oval to ovate-oblong or sometimes obovate or elliptical, 4-6 cm.
The leaves are on long stalks, with obovate leaflets, and broad stipules.
Its stem is generally simple, but sometimes branched at the base; and the leaves are obovate or broadly oblong, without stipules, serrate, and narrowed down at the base to a short stalk.
Its leaves are spreading, obovate in form, with toothed margins, and bristly hairs on the under side of the midrib.
The leaves are usually trifoliate, with obovate or oblong, toothed leaflets, but the lateral leaflets are often very small or altogether wanting.
The five sepals are about half the length of the petals, and terminate in a very fine point; and the petals are obovate and slightly notched.
Its leaves have from four to seven pairs of leaflets, varying in form from linear to obovate or obcordate, and have branched tendrils.
It has a tufted, perennial rootstock, from which grows a cluster of obovate leaves, usually smooth, and slightly toothed.
The central motor-cell is usually the largest and it is somewhat obovate in shape in a transverse section of the leaf.
In the sterile fronds the segments of the pinnae are very plainly adnate to the secondary midrib, and are roundish or roundish-obovate in shape.
In this genus the receptacle is sessile, and formed of anobovate globular net-work.
Root-leaves thicker, round-obovate with a cuneate or truncate base, or the earliest almost sessile in rosulate tufts.
Stems, at least the flowering ones, ascending or erect; flowers in corymbed or simple cymes; corolla-lobes obovate or obcordate.
All radical; obovate to oblong-spatulate; two inches or less long; mostly smooth above; sometimes woolly below.
Clustered at the ends of the branches; obovateto lanceolate; two to four inches long; herbaceous.
Obovate or spatulate-oblong; one to four inches long; pale; somewhat succulent; slightly viscid.
This beautiful species is easily known by its comparatively large size, peculiar, obovate shape, its brilliant color, and unusually persistent membranous calyculus.
Its alternate, entire, obovate leaves have short petioles; they are glabrous and are about 4 to 8 inches in length.
It has opposite obovate leaves, and fragrant white flowers.
When ripe, the obovate fruit is a purplish-yellow, having usually two seeds, and but one seed when abortive.
The seeds are enclosed in three or more obovate cells, each cell containing two seeds.
Defn: Inversely ovate; ovate with the narrow end downward; as, anobovate leaf.
Purslane tree, a South African shrub (Portulacaria Afra) with many small opposite fleshyobovate leaves.
Leaves obovate in shape, notched, and thickly covered with a whitish powder, which imparts to them a pleasing glaucous hue.
The leaves are entire, dark green in colour, and about an inch long, and obovate or oblong in shape.
The largeobovate leaves are often a foot in length and half, as much broad.
Fruit large, usually obovate and mainly sunken at the large end; ripe July to October, according to the variety.
Leaves obovate or oblong, coarsely undulately toothed, with 10 to 16 pairs of straight, prominent ribs beneath; surface minutely downy beneath, and smooth above.
The obovate and almost stalked buds of the Alders are also very conspicuous and peculiar.
Leaves crowded at the ends of the flowering branches, obovate or spatulate, auriculate at base, smooth (1 ft.
Leaves obovate or oblong, lyrately pinnatifid or deeply sinuate-lobed or nearly parted, the lobes sparingly and obtusely toothed or entire.
The leaves are large, strong-scented and hairy, composed of 7 to 9 obovate to oblong, pointed leaflets which turn a beautiful yellow in the fall.
Each spicule was normally surmounted by an obovate spore.
It is the antheridium, or male organ, which is formed by this process; it takes the form of an obliquely clavate or obovate cellule, which is always considerably smaller than the oogonium, and adheres to its walls by a plane or convex area.
In Coleosporium there are two kinds of spores, one kind consisting of pulverulent single cells, and the other of elongated septate cells, which break up into obovate joints.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "obovate" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.