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Example sentences for "reticulate"

Lexicographically close words:
reticences; reticent; retici; reticorum; reticular; reticulated; reticulation; reticulations; reticule; reticules
  1. Thallus dichotomous, copiously reticulate and porose, with a narrow costa; gemmae none.

  2. In appearance it lies between rubble and reticulate work, differing from the latter in that the small blocks are less carefully finished and are laid with less regularity.

  3. The wall on the north side, of reticulate work, can be distinguished in Fig.

  4. Quasi-reticulate facing, with brick corner, at the entrance of the Small Theatre.

  5. The quasi-reticulate work belongs to the early years of the Roman colony.

  6. Nevertheless the quasi-reticulate masonry of the cella, closely resembling that of the Small Theatre, dates from the early years of the Roman colony.

  7. The reticulate work, opus reticulatum, formed the outer surface of a wall, the inner part of which was built up with rubble.

  8. Reticulate facing, with corners of brick-shaped stone (I.

  9. The exterior of the tomb was unfinished; the reticulate masonry still lacked its facing of more costly material.

  10. Ulius and Aninius repaired the Stabian Baths; the characteristic masonry, with quasi-reticulate facing, is similar to that of the Small Theatre and the Amphitheatre.

  11. It is a moot point whether the frogs have light spots on a dark background or have a light background with an extensive reticulate dark pattern.

  12. Skeleton reticulate but almost devoid of spongin, the reticulations close but formed mainly by single spicules; skeleton-fibres barely distinguishable.

  13. The skeleton of the sponge is as a rule distinctly reticulate and often hard; the skeleton-spicules are either slender or stout and sometimes change considerably in proportions and outline as they approach the gemmules.

  14. They are usually arranged so as to form a reticulate skeleton.

  15. In Spongilla crassissima, on the other hand, the number of spicules although large is not unusually so; but they form a very definitely reticulate skeleton, and are bound together by an unusually profuse secretion of spongin.

  16. Sponge forming rather thick sheets of considerable size, hard but brittle, almost black in colour; oscula inconspicuous; external membrane supported on a reticulate horizontal skeleton.

  17. They are not arranged so as to form a reticulate skeleton but interlock in all directions, and there is hardly any spongin associated with them.

  18. Ectocyst absent except at the base of the zoarium which is modified to form a creeping "sole"; polypides embedded in a common synoecium of reticulate structure.

  19. Skeleton loose, feebly reticulate at the base of the sponge; transverse fibres slender in the upper part of the sponge, often scarcely recognizable at its base.

  20. The shell is thick, reticulate or striped, and sometimes provided with short spines; often distinctly porous.

  21. Cortex of long slender spines, mingled with smaller spinules and warts, gray brown or blackish in color; the longer spines first fall away, leaving a reticulate surface to the inner peridium.

  22. Stem= nearly equal, striate, reticulate at the apex, colored like the pileus.

  23. The specimens which I have referred to this species appear to be a small form with the pileus scarcely more than an inch broad and merely wrinkled on the disk, not distinctly reticulate as in the type.

  24. Denuded pileus reticulate with coarse deep pits or cells Veil exposed, reticulate with small perforations P.

  25. Stem= mostly obclavate (inversely club-shaped) and reticulate to the base.

  26. Stem= stout, bulbous as in the Luridi but not, with a few exceptions, reticulate nor dotted with pointed scales nor red.

  27. The like Reticulate grain is observable in some Russia Leather.

  28. To omit the noble reticulate work, in the chapters of the pillars of Solomon, with Lillies, and Pomegranats upon a network ground; and the Craticula or grate through which the ashes fell in the altar of burnt offerings.

  29. We pretend not to multiply vegetable divisions by Quincuncial and Reticulate plants; or erect a new Phytology.

  30. The ova in it have all assumed the permanent form, and are provided with beautiful reticulate nuclei, with, as a rule, one more especially developed nucleolus, and smaller granular bodies.

  31. The granular mass becomes somewhat stellate, and finally assumes a reticulate form with one more highly refracting nucleoli at the nodal points of the reticulum.

  32. The nucleus has the same peculiar reticulate character as at first.

  33. Very common, recognized by its bright yellow color and conspicuous reticulate habit.

  34. The globose brilliantly iridescent sporangia are lifted above the substratum on snow-white columnar stalks; these are again joined one to another by the pure white vein-like cords of the reticulate hypothallus.

  35. In the meantime two things have happened; Mr. Lister has examined the specimens remaining in the Strasburg herbarium and finds them with reticulate spores.

  36. Often the gills are forked near the stem or anastomose, or they are connected by veins which themselves anastomose in a reticulate fashion so that the meshes resemble the pores of certain species of the family Polyporaceæ.

  37. Cap light brown, tubes greenish yellow or yellowish; stem in these specimens not reticulate (2/3 natural size).

  38. It is usually more strongly reticulate over the upper half.

  39. Cap light brown, tubes greenish yellow or yellowish; stem in this specimen entirely reticulate (natural size, often larger).

  40. Side and under view showing forked gills, and reticulate collapsed patches of dark slime on stem.

  41. Its reticulate appearance seems to indicate at first sight the usual lattice-shell, pierced by numerous very small pores (Pl.

  42. Each piece is either a simple hollow ring or a pileate and reticulate cap, composed of a ring and several connected bars.

  43. When they are completely developed, the entire network of the shell is drained by a reticulate system of communicating axial canals; they are probably filled by jelly in the living body.

  44. No wing-speculum; lower portion of tarsi with small reticulate scales in front.

  45. Bill long, slender, usually straight, in some species gently curved; tarsus scutellate both in front and behind except in Numenius which has the back of tarsus reticulate and the bill very long and decurved; toes slightly webbed at base.

  46. Culmen with a decided dertrum or arched swelling at tip; tarsus reticulate behind.

  47. Adult, containing two diatom frustules, and three Tintinnid ciliates, with a large Dinoflagellate just caught by the expanded reticulate pseudopodia.

  48. Rhizopoda Filosa, and are included here to show the characteristic filose pseudopodia in contrast with the reticulate spread of the others.

  49. Colour pale brown or reddish, with a brown edging to each scale forming a reticulate pattern; a yellow cross-band on the occiput; belly uniformly white.

  50. Osteocephalus pearsoni can be distinguished most readily from other members of the genus by the brown reticulate pattern on the venter, round brown spots on the flanks, and smooth skin on the flanks.

  51. There is a somewhat solid material permeating it, usually, regarded as having a reticulate structure.

  52. It is variously described, sometimes as a reticulate network, sometimes as a mass of threads or fibres, and sometimes as a mass of foam (Fig.

  53. The stem is stout, vermilion, somewhat orange at the top, reticulate or punctuate.

  54. Stem mostly obclavate, inversely club-shaped, and reticulate to the base.

  55. The reticulate capillitium springs from the dark, penetrating stem.

  56. The stem is subequal, cespitose, reticulate to the base, pulverulent below.

  57. The wall thin; the vesicles with a dark polygonal outline, disposed in thin irregular reticulate patches, which are more or less confluent.

  58. The sporangium is often elegantly reticulate as observed by Schweinitz even when the lime is quite scanty.

  59. The wall is a single membrane, and there is but a single reticulate layer of lime upon it, which is plainly on the inner surface.

  60. A single reticulate plasmodium is usually converted without change of form into an individual plasmodiocarp.

  61. The wall thin; the outer layer not continuous, the irregular brown vesicles disposed in angular patches and elongated bands, which have a somewhat reticulate arrangement.

  62. Spores globose, dark violaceous, the surface minutely warted, the warts with a reticulate arrangement, 7-9 mic.

  63. The polygonal vesicles give a reticulate appearance to the dark-brown patches which ornament the surface of the wall.

  64. In many instances the protoplasm of the ovum assumes a sponge-like or reticulate arrangement, a fluid yolk substance being placed in the meshes of the reticulum.

  65. By a continuous division of the nuclei there becomes scattered through the interior of the ovum a series of bodies, each formed of nucleus and a thin layer of protoplasm with reticulate processes.

  66. The protoplasm of vertebrate ova frequently exhibits a reticulate or sponge-like structure (fig.


  67. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "reticulate" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    barred; grated; laced; meshed; netted; reticular; streaked; striped