galea

[ US /ˈɡeɪɫiə/ ]
[ UK /ɡˈe‍ɪli‍ə/ ]
NOUN
  1. an organ shaped like a helmet; usually a vaulted and enlarged petal as in Aconitum
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How To Use galea In A Sentence

  • On the world stage, Galea has worked in Vegas as a support act for Nancy Sinatra.
  • Nox et caeruleam terris infuderat umbram. ille propinquabat silvis et ab aggere celso scuta virum galeasque videt rutilare comantes, qua laxant rami nemus adversaque sub umbra flammeus aeratis lunae tremor errat in armis. obstipuit visis, ibat tamen, horrida tantum spicula et inclusum capulo tenus admovet ensem. ac prior unde, viri, quidve occultatis in armis? 'non humili terrore rogat. nec reddita contra vox, fidamque negant suspecta silentia pacem. Post-Augustan Poetry From Seneca to Juvenal
  • Without dissection the cardo can seldom be seen; the stipes is usually at least partially visible; the galeae, when developed into the haustellum, become prominent, and can be seen in part even in the more primitive state; the palp, when reduced, is frequently completely hidden,
  • Python and the Stephen Fry compo « dudegalea dudegalea interstellar systems engineer Python and the Stephen Fry compo « dudegalea
  • The cervix and paired episternal sclerites are visible below the galeae.
  • It then ascends upon the forehead, and ends in two branches, a medial and a lateral, which supply the integument of the scalp, reaching nearly as far back as the lambdoidal suture; they are at first situated beneath the Frontalis, the medial branch perforating the muscle, the lateral branch the galea aponeurotica. IX. Neurology. 5e. The Trigeminal Nerve
  • Iuno, tene; tuque o puppem ne desere, Pallas: nunc patrui nunc flecte minas. cessere ratemque accepere mari. per quot discrimina rerum expedior! subita cur pulcher harundine crines velat Hylas? unde urna umeris niueosque per artus caeruleae vestes? unde haec tibi volnera, Pollux? quantus io tumidis taurorum e naribus ignis! tollunt se galeae sulcisque ex omnibus hastae et iam iamque umeri. quem circum vellera Martem aspicio? quaenam aligeris secat anguibus auras caede madens? quos ense ferit? miser eripe parvos, Post-Augustan Poetry From Seneca to Juvenal
  • The silvering of the reverse has been so corroded that no signs of the goddess's galeated head are visible. The Land of Midian — Volume 1
  • Vnde quum equitant plures dominæ simul et videntur à longe, apparent milites, habentes galeas in capitibus cum lanceis eleuatis. The iournal of frier William de Rubruquis a French man of the order of the minorite friers, vnto the East parts of the worlde. An. Dom. 1253.
  • The silvering of the reverse has been so corroded that no signs of the goddess’s galeated head are visible. The Land of Midian
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