ADJECTIVE
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especially of leaves; growing on a stem especially on the upper part of a stem
cauline leaves - (of plants) producing a well-developed stem above ground
How To Use cauline In A Sentence
- cauline leaves
- The stems may be simple or branched, in the large types reaching as much as I m in height; the basal leaves are long, often pinnately lobed and coarsely toothed, but sometimes are not serrated, while the cauline leaves are simple and linear. Chapter 27
- Base foliation is fascicular, cauline foliation each other is unripe(Sentencedict), feather crack.
- - The stem of the 2nd is procumbent abot the size of the former, jointed and unbranched. it's leaves are cauline, compound and oppositely pinnate; the rib from 14 to 16 inches long celindric and smooth. the leafets The Journals of Lewis and Clark, 1804-1806
- Simple and erect. its leaves are cauline, and Spredding. the leafits are jointed & oppositly poinnate 3 par and termonateing in one, cessile widest at the base and tapering to an accuminated point, an inch and The Journals of Lewis and Clark, 1804-1806
- By contrast, C. nipponica has 2-or 3-leaved stems, - or 5-or 7-foliolate basal leaves, cauline leaves with auriculate to amplexicaul petiolar bases, spatulate petals 5-6 mm, and apically margined seeds.
- Cauline leaf all gives birth to short fluff.
- Leaves cauline, 17-30 at anthesis; petiole 0. 2-8 cm. Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]
- Basal leaves and flowers initiate from a tuberous rhizome and three green cauline leaves arranged in a whorl form an involucre around the developing flower.
- Page view page image: as a goose quil; it is simple and erect. its leaves are cauline, and spredding. the leaf [l] its are jointed & oppositly poinnate Original journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1804-1806