10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «CERIFEROUS»
Discover the use of
ceriferous in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
ceriferous and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
New Zealand Journal of Zoology
It can be inferred that the egg is inserted into plant tissue obliquely, leaving only
the reticulate area exposed, and that this is then covered with flocculent waxy
material from the plate of ceriferous pores on the 9th abdominal segment of the ...
In California and elsewhere it has been confused with other species, particularly
with E. coralloides, from which it may be distinguished by the reticulately
ceriferous lower surface of its leaflets, and with E. corallodendrum, which is not
known to ...
International Dendrology Society, 1981
3
Memoirs of the New York Botanical Garden
4. Leaflets velvety -pubescent. Inflorescence pilosulose 13. il. molle. 4. Leaflets
glabrous or at least not velvety. Inflorescence not pilosulose. 5. 5. Ovary
pubescent on the margins. Leaflets with the lower surface often glacuous to
ceriferous. 6.
4
The Chemical News and Journal of Physical Science
As regards the precipitation of the oxalate it is necessary to proceed exactly as
was previously laid down for the precipitation of ceriferous solutions. * BericUe
der Dcutsch. Chem. Gail The solution to be treated with the oxide must be
perfectly ...
5
The Highly Selective Dictionary of Golden Adjectives
secreting or producing cerumen, or earwax. “Any man told he is going deaf may
well be afflicted with excessively ceriferous ears and have to put up with periodic
cleansing of those organs." chapfallen (CHAP-FAW-len) From a former Englisli ...
6
Bulletin of the United States Geological Survey
“'eimar, 1883. Stroheeker, J. R. Cerium oxide, etc., in dilnvial clay. J01".de prakt.
Chemie, Erdmann, 1886, p. 132; Chemical News, London, VOLLIII, p. 136.
Further experiments on the ceriferous Hainstadt clays. Chemical News, London,
Vol.
John Casper Branner, 1896
7
Bioscientific Terminology: Words from Latin and Greek Stems
... made of wax cerosis — morbid condition of a membrane in which it seems to
consist of waxlike scales ceraceous — waxy ceriferous — wax-bearing; waxy
ceroid — a yellow-to-brown pigment found especially in the liver in cirrhosis 4.
FIL- ...
8
A Dictionary for Invertebrate Zoology:
[L. cereus, waxen] Wax-like. ceriferous a. [L. cera, wax; ferre, to carry] Bearing or
pro- ducing wax. cerinula larva (CNID: Anthozoa) In Ceriantharia, pelagic larvae
resembling medusae with flagella and a circlet of marginal tentacles; many ...
9
Aquatic and Wetland Plants of Southwestern United States
... or more usually coalesced; fruit various, dry or drupaceous, with resinous or
ceriferous mesocarp and crustaceous or bony endocarp (stone) ; seed with little
or no endosperm. About 60 genera and nearly 600 species, mostly in the tropics.
1.
Donovan Stewart Correll, Helen B. Correll, 1975
10
Oligocene Plants From the Upper Ruby River Basin, ...
... predominant xeric element. Most species on the benches are dwarfed,
tomentose, ceriferous, glandular, spiny, or succulent and occur primarily on
protected draws and dry washes. TABLE 1.——List of living plants in the Ruby
region (Trees.
Herman Frederick Becker, 1961