Many individuals have a bifid subarticular tubercle beneath the fourth finger.
Many workers have used the presence of a bifid subarticular tubercle beneath the fourth finger as a diagnostic character of certain species of hylids.
Twenty specimens have a bifid subarticular tubercle beneath the fourth finger; in the others there are no bifid tubercles.
The distal subarticular tubercle of the fourth finger is either bifid or double in all specimens; that on the third finger usually is bifid, sometimes single.
The distalsubarticular tubercle beneath the fourth finger is bifid in about two-thirds of the specimens; in the rest it is round.
Examination of the subarticular tubercles in Ptychohyla reveals considerable intraspecific variation.
The following plants are used medicinally by the Indians as remedies for the diseases named, respectively: Acitz.
Hammocks (kaan) of cotton or henequen fiber are always conspicuous articles of furniture, as they are slung all around the room, making it very difficult to move about in it when they are let down.
Indeed, the foregoing description would apply almost as well to Indians of the more remote villages of the present day as to those of the time immediately after the conquest.
Consistent differences exist in relative lengths of the digits, size of subarticular tubercles, size and number of supernumerary tubercles, size and shape of the inner metatarsal tubercle, and amount of webbing (Pls.
Smilisca puma is unique in the genus in lacking webbing in the hand; furthermore, this species is distinctive in having many large subarticular tubercles on the hand and a relatively small inner metatarsal tubercle.
The lateral branch attaches to the subarticular cartilage ventral to the first interphalangeal joint and is also bound by connective tissue to the ventrolateral surface of the first phalanx.
The medial branch, after sending dorsal slips to each of the first two subarticular cartilages, attaches to the subarticular cartilage of the third interphalangeal joint.
A dorsal slip arises at the point of divergence of the lateral and middle branches and attaches to the subarticular cartilage of the first interphalangeal joint.
The muscle attaches to the proximal end of the subarticular cartilage ventral to the trochlea for digit III.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "subarticular" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.