How To Use Cephalopoda In A Sentence
- The uterus is also double in the crustacea and the cephalopoda, for the membranes which include their so-called eggs are of the nature of a uterus. On the Generation of Animals
- An enumeration of some other examples of the natatorial type, as the cephalopoda (instanced in the cuttle-fish) in the mollusca; the crustacea (crabs, &c.) in the annulosa; the owls Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation
- For example, even within Gastropoda and Cephalopoda, large numbers of rearrangements are common.
- The con also picked up our tab tickets, Coke, popcorn, ride for the Thursday Midnight Showing of Pirates of the Caribbean 2: Keira's Sunburn, which was pretty awesome, but I speak as a fan of Davy Jones, cephalopoda, and Keira's sunburn, so I may not be the most objective source. Kenneth Hite's Journal
- The young are produced in the same way also by the cephalopoda, e.g. sepias and the like, and by the crustacea, e.g. carabi and their kindred, for these also lay eggs in consequence of copulation, and the male has often been seen uniting with the female. On the Generation of Animals
- This section covers almost all of the Mollusca except the three huge clades of advanced mollusks: Bivalvia, Cephalopoda, and Gastropoda.
- But the general plan of their body is that of the Cephalopoda; and, though this is true in a certain degree of all the Testacea, it is more especially true of those turbinated species that have a spiral shell. On the Parts of Animals
- But the Cephalopoda and the turbinated Testacea have in common an arrangement which stands in contrast with this. On the Parts of Animals
- Some animals manifestly emit semen, as all the sanguinea, but whether the insects and cephalopoda do so is uncertain. On the Generation of Animals
- But we cannot say simply that all bloodless animals produce a scolex, for the classes overlap one another, (1) the insects, (2) the animals that produce a scolex, (3) those that lay their egg imperfect, as the scaly fishes, the crustacea, and the cephalopoda. On the Generation of Animals