Compound sporophores arise when any of the branched or unbranched types of spore-bearing hyphae described above ascend into the air in consort, and are more or less crowded into definite layers, cushions, columns or other complex masses.
Vegetative body of branched or unbranched cell-filaments, the segments of which separate as swarm-cells (Gonidia).
Defn: Having three ribs or nerves extending unbranched from the base to the apex; -- said of a leaf.
Defn: Having a solitary head; -- said of unbranched composite plants.
Defn: A kind of flower cluster in which sessile flowers are arranged on an unbranched elongated axis.
Jamaica (Spathelia simplex), which has anunbranched palmlike stem, and a terminal cluster of large, pinnate leaves.
Note: Ravenala Madagascariensis, the principal species, is an unbranched tree with immense oarlike leaves growing alternately from two sides of the stem.
The stiff, usually unbranched stem does its best in attaining a height of two feet.
Carolinianum), once confounded with the above, sends up several unbranched scapes from the same tuffet.
Trophosome with stalked hydrothecae; gonosome, free medusae with otocysts and four, rarely six or eight, unbranched radial canals.
The anterior half of the very high dorsal is made up of unbranched simple rays.
Thorns unbranched on twigs, situated at the nodes; lateral buds not superposed, not covered by bark; fruit a small pome.
Usually defined as a plant with a woody stem, unbranched at or near the base, reaching a height of at least 15 feet.
It is solid and round, pale green, very leafy, and closely surrounded by the sheathing bases of the leaves, unbranched except in the flowering head.
The stout, furrowed stem reaches a height of from 2 to 6 feet and is generally unbranched except near the top.
In accordance with the usual definition, a tree must have a single trunk, unbranched at or near the base, and must be at least fifteen feet in height.
In forest trees there is much greater uniformity; the trunks are more slender, taller, often unbranched to a considerable height, and the heads are much smaller.
Stem erect, unbranchedor with one or two branches only --41.
In this species the fructification is conical or lanceolate, and is found in April on short, stout, unbranched stems which have large loose sheaths.
The fructification appears in March and April, terminating in short unbranched stems.
The last genus of the order is Litosiphon, a parasitic group characterised by a cylindrical, cartilaginous, unbranched frond, with scattered, naked spores.
The degree of branching of the inflorescence may be noticed, as this deformity is far more common in plants whose peduncles are branched than in those which have either a solitary flower or an unbranched flower-stalk.
Had they looked upon the process as identical with that by which a branched inflorescence replaces an unbranched one, or a compound leaf takes the place of a simple one, the objections would not have been raised with such force.
The hairs of many bees are feathered for a similar reason, they gather pollen and the pollen adheres to these “feathers” much more readily and in much greater quantity, than it would to simple, unbranched hairs.
There is one class of fungus, however, the Mildews in which practically all the structure grows on the surface, only a few small, unbranched suckers penetrate the plant attacked, for the purpose of obtaining nourishment.
Having a solitary head; -- said of unbranched composite plants.
A kind of flower cluster in which sessile flowers are arranged on an unbranched elongated axis.
Ravenala Madagascariensis, the principal species, is an unbranched tree with immense oarlike leaves growing alternately from two sides of the stem.
Having three ribs or nerves extending unbranchedfrom the base to the apex; -- said of a leaf.
The tracheae themselves are extremely minute, unbranched (so far as I could follow them) tubes.
After the formation of the structureless layer between the ectoderm and entoderm, calcareous spicules make their appearance in it as delicate unbranched rods pointed at both extremities.
Now as it is held that a clear unbranched outline is essential to a well-formed root crop of every kind, whenever a crop becomes fingered-and-toed, it is looked upon as a disease.
Hawthorn fences are sometimes allowed to get several feet high before being brought into reasonable dimensions, in which case they get smooth, unarmed, and unbranched stems at the base.
The identical individual, which formerly bore small rosettes of basal leaves, with short and unbranched flower-stalks, became richly leaved and often produced quite a profusion of flower-heads on branched stems.
Crowded cultures as a rule, will give weak plants with thin stems, mostly unbranched and bearing only small capsules.
More curious still are the unbranched varieties consisting of a single stem, as may be seen sometimes in the corn or maize and in the fir.
The Abies Webbiana attains thirty-five feet in girth, with a trunk unbranched for forty feet.
Conferva crispata again, as mentioned above, occurs in several localities; and in one locality a beautiful unbranched Conferva, with torulose articulations.
Not long after the closure of the blastopore, calcareous spicules make their appearance in the larva as delicate unbranched rods pointed at both extremities.
These organs consist of the true ovaria, or glandular bodies seated on each side, not far from the basal edge of the labrum; of the main or unbranched ovarian ducts; and of the (Pl.
Large nerves and the main pair ofunbranched ovarian tubes (Pl.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "unbranched" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.