Synonymer & Information om | Engelska ordet PETIOLE


PETIOLE

3

Antal bokstäver

7

Är palindrom

Nej

10
ET
ETI
IO
LE
OL
OLE
PE
PET

2

2

6

236
EE
EEL
EEO
EEP
EET
EI
EIE


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Exempel på hur man kan använda PETIOLE i en mening

  • Plants in this genus have showy, often intensely bright flowers and rounded, peltate (shield-shaped) leaves with the petiole in the centre.
  • kerrii scarious, small, basally fused to the petiole, domatia present, stomata irregularly anomocytic.
  • An important feature of the leaves is the petiole, which is flattened sideways so that the leaves have a particular type of movement in the wind.
  • The leaves are mostly opposite with no stipules (appendages at the base of a leafstalk or petiole), and may be either evergreen or deciduous.
  • Formicine ants have a single node-like or scale-like petiole (postpetiole entirely lacking) and the apex of the abdomen has a circular or U-shaped opening (the acidopore), usually fringed with hairs.
  • In botany, a tendril is a specialized stem, leaf or petiole with a threadlike shape used by climbing plants for support and attachment, as well as cellular invasion by parasitic plants such as Cuscuta.
  • The body of males is depigmentated, the cuticle is thin, the petiole and postpetiole are widely connected, and degenerate mandibles, palps, and antennae are observed.
  • The wasps secrete an ant repellent chemical which they spread around the base of the petiole or anchor to prevent the loss of eggs or brood.
  • It contains the most advanced hymenopterans and is distinguished from Symphyta by the narrow "waist" (petiole) formed between the first two segments of the actual abdomen; the first abdominal segment is fused to the thorax, and is called the propodeum.
  • In botany, this leaf stalk is generally called a petiole, but in regard to fronds specifically it is called a stipe, and it supports a flattened blade (which may be called a lamina), and the continuation of the stipe into this portion is called the rachis.
  • The leaves have fine hairs, are green at the bottom and shade to purplish at the top; they are 2–4 cm long and broad, with a 1–2 cm petiole (leaf stalk), and wavy to serrated margins.
  • The nests are suspended from a surface by a petiole and are constructed from a paper-like substance made of a mix of saliva and wood fibres chewed off old and soft wood or dead twigs.
  • They are most easily identified from other subfamilies by possessing a single-node petiole with a constriction before the second gastral segment.
  • The leaves are 4–10 cm long and 2–8 cm broad, palmately lobed, with five deeply toothed lobes with long acuminate tips and double-serrated margins, and with distinctive tufts of orange-red hairs in the main vein axils at the base of the leaf; the petiole is 2–5 cm long.
  • In the case of ferns, the stipe is only the petiole from the rootstock to the beginning of the leaf tissue, or lamina.
  • In botany, a stipule is an outgrowth typically borne on both sides (sometimes on just one side) of the base of a leafstalk (the petiole).
  • Leaves are notable for a large, leaf-like petiole, resembling those of the related makrut lime and ichang papeda, and are heavily scented.
  • They are connected to the stem with a petiole (leaf stalk) and stipules (appendage at the base of a leaf stalk).
  • This gives the appearance of a pair of large stipules below a "petiole" bearing a trefoil of three leaflets – in fact, the true stipules are minute, soon falling or withering.
  • In flowering plants, as well as the blade of the leaf, there may be a petiole and stipules; compound leaves may have a rachis supporting the leaflets.


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