General color of back and sides results from uniform mixture of black distal parts of aristiforms with Ochraceous-Buff of subapical zone of setiforms.
Setiforms on outer thighs: Whitish basally, gradually blackening toward tip but interrupted by Ochraceous-Tawny, subapical zone 3 mm long.
Some are whitish basally and gradually become black toward tip with no subapical zone.
Common exceptions to this pattern are setiforms without subapical zones; these appear on the dorsal surface among setiforms which are normal in possessing distinctive subapical zones.
The former had the subapical spot and stripe in the cells clear green; of the latter 1 had the same, 5 had these obscure or obsolescent.
In all the former the subapical spot on fore wing and the stripe on same wing which crosses the cell inside the common black band, were distinct and green; in all the latter these marks were either obscure or obsolescent.
The subapicaland submarginal spots are more or less imperfectly silvered.
On the under side the fore wings are pale fulvous, black at the base and ferruginous at the tip, the ferruginous shade interrupted by the subapical pale spots, which on this side of the wing are pearly-white.
The male on the upper side is dark blackish-brown, with three small subapical spots, and one small spot below these, near the origin of the third median nervule.
Under side: Superiors have the two subapical silver spots and silver spots on margin well defined; color of inner half of wing rosy.
On the under side of the fore wings there are two subapical and five marginal silver spots.
The subapical patch is brown, adorned by two or three well-silvered spots.
The upper marginal spots and two spots on thesubapical patch are well silvered.
The wings on the under side are pale fulvous, mottled with buff on the subapical interspaces of the fore wings.
The transverse subapical band is pale yellow, almost white; the ocelli of the wings are more as in lavinia than in coenia.
The fore wings on the under side are buff, laved with pale red at the base, marked with ferruginous on the outer margin and about the subapical spots.
The subapical spots and the pale spots of the marginal series are very little silvered.
Appendage of setae with subapical tooth larger and stouter, more obtuse, than in alternata, making a wider angle with the apical tooth, and always conspicuous; the serrations proximad of the tooth fine and rather long.
Tentacular cirri resembling median tentacle in form, being narrowed distad with subapical enlargement slight; one or two fine setae emerging from a small nodule at distal end of parapodium proximad of tentacular cirrus.
The notocirri in general have the same characteristic form as the tentacular cirri, narrowing continuously distad with the subapical enlargement slight.
Median tentacle surpassing palpi in length; subapical swelling pronounced, much more so than that of the laterals.
Lateral tentacles much shorter, their tips reaching only to near middle of light region between proximal black region and subapical black ring of median tentacle.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "subapical" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.