Racemes or branches of the panicleusually elongated, spreading outwards, usually recurved, forming a widened panicle --153.
Panicle spreading or somewhat contracted, but not spike-like; axis of the spikelet without bristles --21.
Spikelets in dense one-sided clusters at the ends of the panicle branches =Orchard Grass, Dactylis glomerata.
Racemes or branches of thepanicle either short and arranged along a more or less elongated axis, or elongated and ascending, scarcely recurved, forming a narrow more or less elongated panicle (5-10 dm.
Heads in axillary clusters, producing a leafy spike-like panicle =Wormwood, Artemisia biennis.
Lower branches of the panicle spreading, bearing staminate flowers, the upper branches erect, with pistillate flowers; aquatic or marsh grass 2-4 m.
The chief branches of the panicledividing only beyond the middle =Hair Grass, Agrostis hyemalis.
Panicle about half as long as the entire plant; leaves copiously hairy =Witch Grass, Panicum capillare.
Spike-like panicle thickened in the middle, more than 1 cm.
Portion of panicle of Aira vivipara and separate floret.
The panicle is much branched, with erect spikelets of five or six flowers.
The flowers are of a bluish-purple or rose colour, about an inch in diameter, arranged in a loose panicle with two flowers on each pedicel.
The flower-heads are small, yellow, in a loosepanicle with long slender stalks.
The starlike flowers, larger than those of the last species, are white, with two yellow spots on each petal, and are arranged in a loose panicle on spreading pedicels.
The flowers are white, in a panicle with slender, erect branches; and the fruit is smooth.
The spikelets are round or broadly ovate, nearly a quarter of an inch long, more or less tinged with purple, on the long, slender branches of a loose, spreading panicle three or four inches long.
In Eragrostis tremula the panicle is very diffuse, in Eragrostis Willdenoviana less so.
The inflorescence is a panicle of spikes on a short or long erect slender peduncle.
Panicle effuse, glumes I and II awned or not; callus naked.
The branches of a panicle are usually loose, spreading or drooping in most grasses.
Spikelets versatile, narrow, linear 1 inch or more long, branches of panicle solitary 3.
The former is a tall plant with very narrow panicle and spikelets and the latter either tall or short and with a panicle bearing very slender divaricate branches.
So tenacious is it and prompt, that should a panicle as it whirls downward touch the leaves of lower branches of the parent, or of any neighbouring tree, it sticks and becomes a pendant swaying trap in a new position.
The natural glutin is produced while the slim, fluted, inch-long seeds are green, but its virtue remains even after the wholepanicle has withered and has fallen.
Pinkish purple or pink blossoms are borne in a rather narrow, elongated panicle on the typical Sweet William.
Missouriensis), its short, broad, spreadingpanicle waving at the summit of a smooth, slender stem from two to five feet tall.
Its partition is already, by the ripening of the first panicle from the beginning of its foundation, strong and brown; it is only colourless at the end which is extending, and in all new formations.
Millet= (Panicum miliaceum) is a native of the East Indies, and is about three feet high; each panicle contains five to six hundred grains.
The plant produces flowering stems, sometimes several feet in height, ultimately terminating in a large panicle of flowers and dying of the effort.
A large and flexible panicle of inflorescence resembling a feather, such as is seen in certain large ornamental grasses.
American fern (Botrychium Virginianum) having a triangular decompound frond and a long-stalked panicle of spore cases rising from the middle of the frond.
American grass (Glyceria Canadensis) with an ample panicle of rather large ovate spikelets, each one composed of imbricated parts and slightly resembling the rattle of the rattlesnake.
Defn: A large and flexible panicle of inflorescence resembling a feather, such as is seen in certain large ornamental grasses.
It has a long, narrow, one-sided, and slightly nodding panicle of bright purple and yellow flowers, like a banner raised above its reedy leaves.
The Panicle and Pelican have often been confused, The letters which spell Pelican, in Panicle are used.
Its habit too is good, and its stately panicle of flowers well-proportioned to the size of the bulbs and leaves.
The former was flowering abundantly, the whole of the culms (which were 20 feet high) being a diffuse panicle of inflorescence.
This plant is occasionally hermaphrodite in Sikkim, the flowers forming a large drooping panicle and ripening small grains; it is, however, a rare occurrence, and the specimens are highly valued by the people.
Avena flavescens) with a loose panicle and yellow shining spikelets is a valuable fodder-grass.
Amphicarpum, native in the south-eastern United States, has fertile cleistogamous spikelets on filiform runners at the base of the culm, those on the terminal panicle are sterile.
Its purple flowers appear from July to October, disposed partly in small heads in the axils of the upper leaves, and partly in slender, flexible spikes which form a panicle more or less branching.
Panicle branched, the clusters open in anthesis; glumes not winged on the back.
Panicle more or less spreading after flowering; ligule short and truncate.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "panicle" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: ament; blossom; cone; head; spike