Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "stipes"

Lexicographically close words:
stipe; stipend; stipendiaries; stipendiary; stipends; stipitate; stipple; stippled; stippling; stipulate
  1. Stipes very short, white, thin, and weak, each formed by a bit of membrane arising from the hypothallus.

  2. The stipes very short, often entirely concealed by the dense mass of sporangia, arising from a common hypothallus.

  3. Stipes long, erect or curved, simple or usually fasciculate and often connate, arising from a thin hypothallus.

  4. Stipes variable, commonly very short, sometimes confluent, arising from a brown hypothallus, prolonged within the sporangium to about half its height.

  5. Some eastern specimens show stipes melanopodous, black below; specimens from Ohio and Nicaragua show stipes milk-white throughout.

  6. Nicaragua specimens not only show a continuous vein-like hypothallus, but have the peridia often confluent, the columellae in such cases confluent, the stipes distinct.

  7. The stipes are three or four times the diameter of the sporangium, brown below, white above, and twisted to allow the sporangium to hang inverted.

  8. The striking contrast of color between sporangia and stipes renders this species at sight, quite distinct from any related form.

  9. Ohio specimens are a little larger and have thicker and more calcareous stipes than is usual in those from Philadelphia.

  10. The calcium in the stipe also varies; the black or brown stipes are, of course, free from it; the gray or white, calcareous.

  11. Stipes articulated to the rootstock, leaving a distinct scar when separated.

  12. Rootstocks creeping, branched, often covered with chaffy scales, bearing scattered roundish knobs, to which the stipes are attached by a distinct articulation.

  13. Rootstock stout, nearly erect, densely chaffy, as are the crowded stipes and rhachis.

  14. Stipes and the stout creeping rootstock bearing broad and deciduous chaffy scales.

  15. Stipes brownish, becoming green above, and so passing into the broad pale green midrib.

  16. Defn: The posterior, inner process of the stipes on the maxillæ of insects.

  17. Defn: A term applied to the stipes or stalks of certain fungi which are covered with a woolly substance which at length becomes powdery.

  18. The posterior, inner process of the stipes on the maxill\'91 of insects.

  19. A term applied to the stipes or stalks of certain fungi which are covered with a woolly substance which at length becomes powdery.

  20. A flexible and nearly transparent flap connects the inner edges of the stipes and cardo, and joins both to the labium.

  21. Stipes black, slender and tomentose at the base.

  22. Stipes tall, lifting the blades ten to fifteen inches above the mud, whence they spring.

  23. The fronds remain green through the winter but the stipes weaken and fall over.

  24. As the short stipes separate at the joints from the rootstock, they leave at the base a thick stubble, which serves to identify the fern.

  25. Stipes and branches of the leaves very slender and polished.

  26. The slender black stipes are very susceptible to changes of light and warped and twisted fronds result.

  27. This rare and delicate little plant bears a rather close resemblance to the maidenhair spleenwort, which, however, has dark stipes instead of green.

  28. Stipes obscurely jointed near the base: Fronds more or less chaffy, pinnæ oblong to ovate, crowded.

  29. Stipes tufted, two to four inches long, brownish beneath, green above.

  30. Their stipes are not jointed to the root stock, nor are their sori at the ends of the veins as in the polypodies.

  31. Stipes jointed an inch or so above the rootstock.

  32. The maxillae are strong, with complicated stipes and with two flat, thin lobes, the inner one smaller than the outer and rounded at the tip, both lobes being ciliate.

  33. The stipes or bare portion of the frond is, as a rule, about the same length as the leafy portion.

  34. The stipes is usually about the same length as the leafy portion of the frond and is of a plain green colour.

  35. The stipes is rather short and bears a few brown scales.

  36. The stipes is of a pale green colour, and it is usually longer than the leafy portion.

  37. We notice the same short stipes and the narrow pinnae on the leafy portion tapering to a point.

  38. The stipes is very short and is extremely brittle.

  39. As a rule the stipes is very much shorter than the leafy portion, and both it and the rachis are thickly covered with scales.

  40. As a rule, the stipes will be about one-third of the whole frond, the leafy portion being long and tongue-shaped.

  41. They may be held in place by fastening a few strips of gummed paper over the stipes and rachis.

  42. The stipes is about the same length as the leafy portion of the frond.

  43. The stipes is usually about one-third of the whole leaf, and is sometimes of a brownish colour.

  44. That portion of the stipes which is under ground is of a dark brown colour, but the portion above the surface is of a bright green tint.

  45. The fronds, which are lanceolate in outline and about four inches to a foot in length, arise from a tufted root-stock; the stipes is usually about a third of the frond.

  46. The stipes is, as a rule, about half the length of the entire leaf; the bare portion of the stalk is thickly covered with brown scales.

  47. The stipes is somewhat longer than the rachis, and it is of a whity-green colour.

  48. When the stipes below the feeler has a row of minute spines set like the teeth of a comb.


  49. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "stipes" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.