Stemless small herbs, with grassy and hairy linear leaves and slender few-flowered scapes, from a solid bulb.
Stemless herbs, with arrow-shaped leaves and simple scapes from a thick-fibrous or subtuberous root.
Low, stemless perennials (as to our wild species) with ternately compound and dissected leaves, and racemose nodding flowers.
Low and stemless perennials, with toothed or pinnatifid root-leaves, and scapes bearing one or more yellow heads.
Stemless plants, with long linear grass-like leaves, wholly submerged.
Stemless perennials, with runners, and with white cymose flowers on scapes.
Nearly stemless herbs, with two smooth and shining flat leaves tapering into petioles and sheathing the base of the commonly one-flowered scape, rising from a deep solid-scaly bulb.
In aspect and foliage resembling a stemless Violet.
They are clustered in heads onstemless plants which form mats or cushions 4-20 in.
Rising bare of leaves, it has but a seminatural aspect, as if it had been stuck rootless in the ground like the leafless, stemless blooms of a child's posy bed.
Common examples of this are found in the earlier blossoms of Specularia perfoliata, in the later ones of most Violets, especially the stemless species, in our wild Jewel weeds or Impatiens, in the subterranean shoots of Amphicarpaea.
The numerous leaves are very bright green in color, leaflets small, nearly entire, with many small stemless ones between the others.
The stemless flints are triangular or oval in outline.
A few quotations regarding the use and mode of manufacture of stemless scrapers may be given: According to Evans, they are made by laying a flake flat side up on a stone, and chipping off around the edge with a hammer.
In the stemless specimens the base is the end opposite the point.
Stewart, with any of the tall thistles, but only with the stemless thistle, which has sharp, fine spikes, and grows close on the ground.
The larger form is generally of a yellowish or brownish hue, surface warty or covered with rough scales; the smaller, stemless minutely warty, bright brown.
The plant occurs very late in the season and the pileus appears as if enveloped in slime and resting stemless on the ground.
On the rose-marble steps of the Yezidee Temple she flung a stemless rose upon Djamouk's shroud, where he had spread it like a patch of snow in the sun.
And we temple girls mocked him and threw stemless roses on the shroud, telling him they were human heads with which to grease his toug.
Five lanceolate and stemlessleaves are in a whorl about the stem just below the flower.
It is branchy, hairy, has finely toothed, stemless leaves, and four-parted magenta flowers growing from the angles of the upper leaves.
The ovate-lanceolate leaves arestemless and seated oppositely on the stem.
The leaves are practically stemless and vary greatly in form, from lance shaped, oblong, to oval and elliptical, round toothed or saw toothed.
The leaves are almost stemless and trifoliate; that is, composed of three leaflets.
In the larger packages not much effort is made to make the fruit attractive but in the smaller ones, stemless and bruised cherries are thrown out and the package filled, stem down, with the best fruits.
These two are roughly separated from the other cultivated members of the genus to which they belong by bearing their fruits on stems in fascicles while the others are practically stemless and are solitary or borne in pairs.
Its decumbent stems are thickly clothed with small, ovate, stemless leaves, and its silvery foliage makes a beautiful setting for its large golden flowers.
Among the more characteristic forms of this flora are the rattans--climbing palms of the genus Calamus, and a great variety of tall, as well as stemless palms.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "stemless" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.