This portion gradually grows outwards laterally, forming in this way a sickle-shaped structure.
The sickle-shaped structure, visible in surface veins, is stated by Koller to be due to a special thickening of the germinal wall.
He believes, as already mentioned, that the sickle-shaped structure, which appears according to him at an earlier stage than is admitted by Gerlach, is in the first instance due to a thickening of the hypoblast.
The nest is a neatly woven pocket-shaped structure, with a roofed entrance at the side.
The nest is a well-woven bag-shaped structure, with a roofed entrance at the side.
The nest is a bottle-shaped structure of mud, plastered to a wall in a cave or to a beam beneath a building.
It is a deep cup-shaped structure, rather neatly made of grass without lining, and woven in with the stems if in a clump of grass, or firmly fixed in a fork if in a bush or low tree.
The nest is a beautiful deep cup-shaped structure, almost always fastened to a branch of a low bush.
It is a broad, cup-shaped structure, neatly and strongly made of fine twigs and dry grass-leaves, lined with roots and with a few strings of green moss wound round the outside.
The nursery of the forktail, although quite a large cup-shaped structure, is not easy to discover; it blends well with its surroundings, and the birds certainly will not betray its presence if they know they are being watched.
Shortly after this the shell appears as a saddle-shaped structure on the hinder part of the dorsal surface of the embryo.
Where the epiblast and hypoblast are in contact the former layer becomes thickened and forms a disc-shaped structure.
In Anodon and Unio it is a projecting trumpet-shaped structure, which after fertilization becomes shortened and reduced to a mere aperture which is finally stopped up.
Unfortunately, the nest is not an open one, but a little mango-shaped structure with an entrance at the side, so that the hen when sitting in it is not visible from above.
The fibres added subsequently are plaited together until a stalk four or five inches long is formed; this is then expanded into a bell-shaped structure.
The nest is a cup-shaped structure, usually built under an eave in the angle which a roof-beam makes with the wall.
This last is a cup-shaped structure slung on to two or three branches of a tree by means of fibres which are wound first round one branch, then passed under the nest, and finally wound round another bough.
It is a saucer-shaped structure made of vegetable materials cemented together with saliva, and lined with feathers.
Built of grasses, bark and fine rootlets; a cup-shaped structure placed in forks of bushes, usually in tangled thickets.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "shaped structure" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.