connate

ADJECTIVE
  1. of similar parts or organs; closely joined or united
    a connate tomato flower
  2. related in nature
    connate qualities
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How To Use connate In A Sentence

  • Five united stamens are adnate to the top of the pistil, which is made up of five connate carpels.
  • This water is thought to be associated with condensation from the ventilation system or connate water from the salt itself.
  • Shelley is enacting rather than simply representing the "origin" he will affirm later in the Defence as "connate" with poetry. Shelley's Golden Wind: Zen Harmonics in _A Defence of Poetry_ and 'Ode to the WestWind'
  • connate qualities
  • The flowers display valvate, distinct, or connate sepals and petals.
  • Well test data of such reservoirs are hard to analyze by conventional well test models, which should be properly modified when the connate water saturation is high.
  • Characters that define this group include staminate flowers in bisexual glomerules, fruiting bracteoles dorsally compressed, and fruiting bracteoles connate with apical lobes free.
  • In young flowers all the carpels are connate at the base, and each mature mericarp represents a single carpel rather than half a carpel as is the case in Lamiaceae and Boraginaceae.
  • Shelley affirms at the base of his practice when he avers that "poetry is connate with the origin of man. Shelley's Golden Wind: Zen Harmonics in _A Defence of Poetry_ and 'Ode to the WestWind'
  • In addition, he determined that the Na / K ratios of the included fluids were low, suggesting that the minerals were deposited from hydrothermal solutions of meteoric rather than connate origin.
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