For every man mai understonde, Hou for a time that it stonde, 4460 It is a sori lust to lyke, Whos ende makth a man to syke And torneth joies into sorwe.
So wiste I nought wher of to yelpe, Bot only that y hadde lore My time, and was sori ther fore.
Mor sori than the king was tho Was nevere man upon this Molde, And thoghte in certain that he wolde Vengance take upon this wrong.
The king was sori for a while, Bot whan he sih that with no wyle He myhte achieve his crualte, He stinte his wraththe and let him be.
Which thing cam al thurgh Falssemblant, That false Nessus the Geant Made unto him and to his wif; Wherof that he hath lost his lif, And schesori for everemo.
And he sone after was redy, And tok his leve forto go; In sori time dede he so.
That was a sori felaschipe: For this thou miht wel understonde, That man mai wel noght longe stonde Which is wyndrunke of comun us; For he hath lore the vertus, Wherof reson him scholde clothe; And that was seene upon hem bothe.
That holde I riht a sori feste, Whan he that reson understod So soudeinliche is woxe wod, 50 Or elles lich the dede man, Which nouther go ne speke can.
For grace anon began to faile, That whan thei comen to bataille Thanne afterward, in sori plit Thei were take and disconfit, So that withinne a litel throwe The myht of hem was overthrowe, 4430 That whilom were wont to stonde.
Mi Sone, that me thenketh routhe; For lovedrunke is the meschief Above alle othre the most chief, If he no lusti thoght assaie, Which mai his sori thurst allaie: 310 As for the time yit it lisseth To him which other joie misseth.
More common appearance, where thesori remain and the nerves are obliterated.
Specimen from Monod, showing the position of the sorion the middle of the tertiary nerves.
The sori are mostly single, though here and there one will be diplazioid,--most commonly the lowest one on the superior side of the lobe.
Underwood in Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, has fronds only four or five inches long, the lower pinnae only pinnatifid and the upper ones lobed, the sori mostly solitary on the lobes.
The venation is free, and the sori are dorsal on the veins.
The sori are usually very full of sporangia, and, when ripe, nearly cover the back of the frond: even the narrow acumination bears a sorus at each undulation of the margin.
To this it may be added, that in some of the areoles the two sori meet and are confluent at the outer angle of the areole; and in this case the two indusia are sometimes, though not always, united into one.
The membranaceous edge of the transformed fertile pinna is attached near the bases of the inferior sori and a fold is usually found pressed against the sori as seen in the drawing (Fig.
It was from this condition of some of the sori that the genus was named Camptosorus (bent fruit-dot); and it is only on this peculiarity that the genus can be kept separate.
The title has without a doubt arisen from the fact that the species bears its sori in masses at the termination of the fronds, quite apart from the leafy portion.
The sori are narrow, and when young are covered with an indusium.
The sori are placed on either side of the vein in the middle of the pinnules.
The sori are very freely scattered on the lobes or pinnules at the back of the frond, and these are covered with the curious hooded indusia which were noticed in the last species.
The sori are chiefly situated near to the inside border of the pinnules.
The sori are chiefly confined to the upper portion of the back of the frond, and are situated on either side of the midrib of the pinnae.
The sori have indusia, but this is hidden by the margin of the pinnules, which are recurved.
The sori are much more abundant on the upper portion of the frond; we shall find them on the back of the leaf along the margins of the lobes.
At first the sori are rounded, but as they mature they spread so as to form almost unbroken lines round the margins of the pinnules.
After the falling away of the indusia the sori tend to spread, so that they may finally cover almost the whole of the back of the fertile pinnae.
As the capsules mature the sori spread out over the under-surface of the frond.
The sori are very abundant, but as these are small they should be carefully examined.
The pairs of sori are covered with pairs of indusia which, on the maturity of the sporangia, open out opposite to each other.
With the disappearance of the indusia the sori tend to spread over the whole surface of the back of the frond.
Ful sori was þat seli knaue, Mikel dred he mouthe haue, For at hise herte he saw a knif, For to reuen him hise lyf.
The first contains those plants which unroll their leaves, when they rise from the stem, and which have their sori either on the back or on the margin of the frond.
Sori round or roundish, on the back or rarely at the apex of the vein, with a special indusium, rarely naked.
Sori oblong or linear, borne on a veinlet parallel to the midrib, and covered with a special usually concave or arched indusium attached to the fruiting veinlet, and opening along the inner side.
Sori forming a chain-like row each side of the midrib or central vein.
Sori on the upper side or rarely on both sides of a veinlet.
Sori minute, at the ends of the veins; indusium continuous or interrupted.
Sori on the upper part of the veins, distinct, or mostly forming a confluent submarginal band of sporangia.
Sori linear, confluent in pairs, each pair appearing like a single sorus with a double indusium opening down the middle.
Sori more or less elongated, occupying one or both sides of oblique veins, covered by a special indusium which is attached by one side to the fertile vein, and is free on the other.
Sori oblong, variously curved, or some of them in opposite pairs.
Sori roundish or elongated and extending far down the free veins, at first covered by the very broad continuous indusium, at length exposed and confluent.
Sporangia borne on elevated receptacles, forming roundish sori imperfectly covered by very delicate hood-shaped indusia attached to the base of the receptacles.
Sori round, borne on the veins; indusium fixed under the sorus, divided into segments or into slender filaments.
Sori short, of few rather large sporangia, placed near the tips of the veins; under surface of the frond usually either chaffy, woolly, or powdery.
The male fern resembles the marginal shield fern in outline, but the fronds are thinner, are not evergreen, and the sori are near the midvein.
Illustration] (2) Sporangia in oblong sori under a reflexed tooth of a pinnule; indusium broad; rachis dark and shining.
Aspidium noveboracense Sori of Aspidium noveboracense Pinnæ andSori of Aspidium noveboracense Oak Fern.
Their stipes are not jointed to the root stock, nor are their sori at the ends of the veins as in the polypodies.
Aspidium marginale Crown of Fronds of Aspidium marginale Sori of Aspidium marginale Male Fern.
PHYLLÌTIS Sori linear, a row on either side of the midvein, and at right angles to it, the indusium appearing to be double.
In identifying this fern the novice should bear in mind the tendency of the curved sori of youth to become straightened and even confluent with age, although such changes are rather unreliable.
Sori at the end of the veins at first small and roundish, but afterwards more or less confluent.
But it is also frequently the case that the soriare produced on the upper side, distinctly within the margin, and where there are no corresponding sori beneath.
This occasionally happens from the elongation of the normally placed sorus, which thus extends to the margin, and returns on the upper side, when the sori chance to be placed opposite to the marginal crenatures.
The ovate-oblong sori are generally single and two-lipped, the slit passing one-third of the way down the sorus.
Portion of a frond separated to show the linear sori or clusters of sporangia (spore-cases).
In some species of Puccinia the sori are so compact that they remain attached to the leaves long after they are dead and fallen.
In some species, the sori are so pulverulent that the spores are as readily dispersed as in the Uredines, in others they are so compact as to be separated from each other with great difficulty.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "sori" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.