10 LIVRES EN ANGLAIS EN RAPPORT AVEC «EXTRORSE»
Découvrez l'usage de
extrorse dans la sélection bibliographique suivante. Des livres en rapport avec
extrorse et de courts extraits de ceux-ci pour replacer dans son contexte son utilisation littéraire.
1
The Ferns (filicales) Treated Comparatively with a View to ...
E = Cystopteris fragilis, Bernh., indusium attached laterally at a point, extrorse. F=
Diella fatcata, Brack., indusium attached laterally along a short line, extrorse. G -
Nephrodium Filix-mas, Rich. , indusium superior, attached laterally at a point, ...
2
Gray's Botanical Text-book
An anther is Extrorse, i. e. turned outward, or Posticous, when it faces toward the
perianth, as in Magnolia and Liriodendron (Fig. 497), Asarum (Fig. 499), and Iris;
these all being cases of adnate and extrorse anthers, the cells attached for their ...
3
Gray's Botanical Textbook: Structural botany
An anther is Extrorse, i. e. turned outward, or Postz'cous, when it faces toward the
perianth, as in Magnolia and Liriodendron (Fig. 497), Asarum (Fig. 499), and Iris;
these all being cases of adnate and extrorse anthers, the cells attached ...
4
Diversity and Classification of Flowering Plants
Filaments slightly flattened, more or less connate below, spreading above;
anthers oblong, dor- sifixed, extrorse. Pollen grains 1-colpate, reticulate. Stylodia
connate into columnar style with 3 spreading, bifurcate stigmas, tuberculate on
inner ...
Armen Leonovich Takhtadzhi͡an, 1997
5
Structural Botany: Or, Organography on the Basis of ...
499), and Iris ; these all being cases of adnate and extrorse anthers, the cells
attached for their whole length to the outside of the summit of the filament or the
connective. Introrse, i. e. turned inward, or Anticous, when it faces toward the axis
of ...
6
The Anther: Form, Function, and Phylogeny
Extrorse anthers are somewhat concentrated in primitive dicots and primitive
monocots and are rare in more advanced groups (Figs. 9, 10). Ceratophyllum,
perhaps the most basal clade of the angiosperms, has extrorse anthers, and so
do ...
William G. D'Arcy, Richard C. Keating, 1996
7
The Century Dictionary: An Encyclopedic Lexicon of the ...
< extrorse + -al.] Same as extrorse. extrorse (eks-trdrs'), a. [< F, extrorse, < L. as if
*extrorsus, toward the outside (cf. L. intror- sus, adv., toward the inside), < extra,
outside, + versus, adv., turned toward, < versus, pp. of ver- tere, turn : see ± ^
verse ...
William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin Eli Smith, 1914
8
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia: The Century ...
Same as extrorse. extrorse (eks-trdrs')) a. [< F. extrorse, < L. as if *extrorsus,
toward the outside (cf. L. intror- sus, adv., toward the inside), < extra, outside, +
versus, adv., turned toward, < versus, pp. of ver- tere, turn : see verse, and cf. in-
trorse.] ...
William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin Eli Smith, 1914
9
The Century dictionary and cyclopedia: a work of universal ...
Same as extrorse. extrorse (eks-tr6rs'), a. [< F. extrorse, < L. as if "extrorsus,
toward the outside (cf. L. intror- 8us, adv., toward the inside), < extra, outside, +
versus, adv., turned toward, < versus, pp. of ver- tere, turn: see verse, and cf. in-
trorse.] ...
William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin Eli Smith, 1906
10
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
Same as extrorse. extrorse (eks-trdrs'), a. [< F. extrorse, < L. as if *extrorsus,
toward the outside (cf. L. intror- sus, adv., toward the inside), < extra, outside, +
versus, adv., turned toward, < versus, pp. of ver- tere, turn : see verse, and cf. in-
trorse.] ...