The =pileus= is thin, convex or later expanded, of a watery appearance, nearly smooth or scurfy or slightly squamulose.
Shrubs, withscurfy pubescence, and small flowers in axillary cymes.
Winter-buds about 1/3' long, dark red, covered with palescurfy pubescence.
Stem:= Stout; yellowish; minutely roughened with scurfy dots, or faintly striped with brown.
The scurfy spots and stems should be removed before cooking.
Having a coat of scurfy scales, as the leaves of the oleaster.
A scurfy eruption in the bend of the knee of the fore leg of a horse.
A genus of shrubs having silveryscurfy leaves, and belonging to the same family as El\'91agnus; also, any plant of this genus.
Volva, ring, and veil absent; flesh very thin, pileus soon splitting along the lines of the gills, scurfy or glabrous.
Flesh very thin, pileus soon splitting along the lines of the gills, scurfy or glabrous.
A scurfy or warty top, the protuberances of which rub easily off, leaving the skin intact.
The sheath or wrapper enclosing the young mushroom, when below or just above the ground; the remains of which are found in the ring, the veil, at the base of the stem, and in the warty or scurfy top of some varieties of mushrooms.
Leaves smooth, pubescent, or resinous beneath, but not scurfynor white --24.
Infected berries take on a gray, scurfy appearance, speckled with brown, are checked in growth and often burst on one side, exposing the seeds.
The stems and branches are pale green or yellow-green with a scurfy waxy coating over the surface, are not tough, and sometimes a large tree can be cut down with a small pocketknife!
The trunk is usually unbranched, cylindrical in young plants, two or three inches in diameter, yellow-green with a scurfy waxy coating; and it is not tough.
The smoothish-stemmed Boletus is well marked by its cylindric minutely scurfy stem which is colored like the tubes.
Stem= equal, straight, hollow, easily splitting, whitish with a frosty bloom or slightly scurfy at the top.
At first the form is oval or cylindrical; most are furnished with a downy or scurfy veil often adhering to the pileus, sometimes forming an adhering volva at the base of the stem.
Defn: Having a coat of scurfy scales, as the leaves of the oleaster.
Defn: A genus of shrubs having silvery scurfy leaves, and belonging to the same family as Elæagnus; also, any plant of this genus.
Defn: A scurfyeruption in the bend of the knee of the fore leg of a horse.
His face is described as varying from a scurfy red to a scurfy blue.
A genus of shrubs having silvery scurfy leaves, and belonging to the same family as Elæagnus; also, any plant of this genus.
Again I saw the gate, the scurfy lawn, the puny looking sorbs, the aged chestnut trees.
The scurfyskin disease so common among savages has a close connexion with the poorness and irregularity of their living.
Nearly half of them were afflicted with the scurfy skin-disease.
Cattle are subject to scurfy ears, which may be owing to a generally morbid condition of the skin, or may be confined to the ears alone.
If the scurfy ears are only a part of a general scurfiness of the skin, the condition of the animal needs attention.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "scurfy" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.