Anagrammes & Informations sur | Mot Anglaise SEPAL
SEPAL
Nombre de lettres
5
Est palindrome
Non
Exemples d’utilisation de SEPAL dans une phrase
- In other words, the flesh of the fruit develops not from the floral ovary, but from some adjacent tissue exterior to the carpel (for example, from receptacles or sepal).
- The long dorsal sepal is erect, triangular at the base and ends in a somewhat thicker club-shaped tip (= clavate).
- The long dorsal sepal is erect, almost translucent white with dark red dots and ends in a somewhat thicker, yellow club-shaped tip, with minute magenta dots.
- The term was first proposed by Augustin Pyramus de Candolle in 1827 and was constructed by analogy with the terms "petal" and "sepal".
- According to the College of Heralds, the heraldic rose may be used with either a petal at the top or if slightly rotated with a sepal at the top.
- The valvate (meeting at the edges without overlapping) perianth (sepal and petal together) members are closely joined at the base.
- Acanthus mollis is entomophilous, pollinated only by bees or bumble bees large enough to force their way between the upper sepal and the lower, so that they can reach the nectar at the bottom of the tube.
- Greenhood orchids are all terrestrial herbs with an underground tuber like many other genera of orchids but are distinguished by a hood-like "galea" formed by the fusing of the dorsal sepal and two lateral petals.
- The broad dorsal sepal is sharp-pointed, dished on the lower side and forms a horizontal hood over the column.
- The sepal, petals and stamen have a similar structure and form to the red poppy (Papaver rhoeas), except the sepals are not hairy.
- The upper sepal is green and purple striped, the lateral petals are twisted, purple mottled and hairy, the labellum is white at the base, with a progressively increasing pink-purple dotting.
- The sessile flowers are zygomorph with five white sepals fused at the base, and five free petals readily deciduous; the upper sepal forms a sac-like spur over the unilocular ovary;the only fertile stamen and the style are strait to slightly curved; fruits indehiscent with three large wings and two smaller ones.
- Female flowers clustered in the axils of orbicular, hoary imbricate bracts, on 5–10 cm long racemes; sepal 1, petal 1; carpel 1, densely hairy; style shortly 3-fid.
- He also dissects the flowers of each to show its various parts – petals, sepal, column, labellum, anther and pollinia.
- Column short not brachiate, stele short sharp, androclinium deeply excavated Flowers dirty purple, dorsal sepal 4 mm, petals 3.
- The sepals are oblong-obtuse, 1 cm long, and 3–4 mm wide; the falcate revolute lateral sepals are slightly shorter and wider than the plicate dorsal sepal.
- Astragalus brachycalyx, the Persian manna or manna, whose name is derived from the Greek ‘brachy’ meaning short, and ‘calyx’ referring to the sepal of the flower, is a species of legume commonly found on rocky mountain slopes in western Asia, from western Iran and northern Iraq to Turkey, and is commonly used as a source of gum tragacanth.
- As in all Pelargonium species, the posterior sepal is fused with the pedicel forming the nectary tube or hypanthium, and in P.
- More specifically, the abaxial surface of the sepal is moderately to densely covered in fine, pilose hair.
- The iris flowers have three pollination units, each of which is composed of a sepal and stylar branch subtended by a single anther and the nectary.
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