How To Use Laciniate In A Sentence

  • Seeds of the laciniated beech gave only 10\% of laciniated plants in experiments made by Strasburger; seeds of the monophyllous acacia, _Robinia Pseud-Acacia monophylla_, were found to be true in only 30\% of the seedlings. Species and Varieties, Their Origin by Mutation
  • As it flows it takes the forms of sappy leaves or vines, making heaps of pulpy sprays a foot or more in depth, and resembling, as you look down on them, the laciniated, lobed, and imbricated thalluses of some lichens; or you are reminded of coral, of leopard's paws or birds' feet, of brains or lungs or bowels, and excrements of all kinds. Ideonexus.com »2004» Maj
  • A. Braun describes a singular case in a leaf of _Irina glabra_ wherein the blade of the leaf on one side was deeply and irregularly laciniated, the other side remaining entire. Vegetable Teratology An Account of the Principal Deviations from the Usual Construction of Plants
  • The medial calcaneal (rami calcanei mediales; internal calcaneal) are several large arteries which arise from the posterior tibial just before its division; they pierce the laciniate ligament and are distributed to the fat and integument behind the tendo calcaneus and about the heel, and to the muscles on the tibial side of the sole, anastomosing with the peroneal and medial malleolar and, on the back of the heel, with the lateral calcaneal arteries. VI. The Arteries. 1F. The Posterior Tibial Artery
  • —Accessory head to its lower and inner part usually ending in the tendocalcaneus, or the calcaneus, or the laciniate ligament. IV. Myology. 8c. The Muscles and Fasciæ of the Leg
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  • Laciniate varieties of plants are of frequent occurrence in gardens where they are often cultivated for their beauty or singularity; thus, there are laciniated alders, fern-leaved beeches and limes, oak-leaved laburnums, &c. Vegetable Teratology An Account of the Principal Deviations from the Usual Construction of Plants
  • A single plant was selected in 1998 based on its dark purple, almost black, laciniate foliage.
  • The trilobed to laciniate tepals resemble those of certain species of Chorizanthe.
  • They comprise three ligaments, viz., the transverse crural, the cruciate crural and the laciniate; and the superior and inferior peroneal retinacula. IV. Myology. 8d. The Fasciæ Around the Ankle
  • Above, where it covers the Popliteus, it is thick and dense, and receives an expansion from the tendon of the Semimembranosus; it is thinner in the middle of the leg; but below, where it covers the tendons passing behind the malleoli, it is thickened and continuous with the laciniate ligament. IV. Myology. 8c. The Muscles and Fasciæ of the Leg
  • Behind the medial malleolus, the tendons, bloodvessels, and nerve are arranged, under cover of the laciniate ligament, in the following order from the medial to the lateral side: (1) the tendons of the Tibialis posterior and Flexor digitorum longus, lying in the same groove, behind the malleolus, the former being the more medial. VI. The Arteries. 1F. The Posterior Tibial Artery
  • Occasionally, its tendon is lost in the laciniate ligament, or in the fascia of the leg. IV. Myology. 8c. The Muscles and Fasciæ of the Leg
  • In the lower fourth of the leg its tendon passes in front of that of the Flexor digitorum longus and lies with it in a groove behind the medial malleolus, but enclosed in a separate sheath; it next passes under the laciniate and over the deltoid ligament into the foot, and then beneath the plantar calcaneonavicular ligament. IV. Myology. 8c. The Muscles and Fasciæ of the Leg
  • Several varieties are cultivated as ornamental plants on account of their beautifully coloured, frizzled and laciniated leaves. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4 "Bulgaria" to "Calgary"
  • In the same way we have laciniated leaves of the Persian lilac, _Syringa persica_, and Moquin mentions instances in a species of _Mercurialis_ in which the leaves were deeply slashed. Vegetable Teratology An Account of the Principal Deviations from the Usual Construction of Plants
  • On the stem, between dorsal and ventral lobes, are two transverse lateral rows of finely laciniated processes or leaflets.
  • a laciniate leaf
  • They comprise three ligaments, viz., the transverse crural, the cruciate crural and the laciniate; and the superior and inferior peroneal retinacula. IV. Myology. 8d. The Fasciæ Around the Ankle
  • —The laciniate ligament is a strong fibrous band, extending from the tibial malleolus above to the margin of the calcaneus below, converting a series of bony grooves in this situation into canals for the passage of the tendons of the Flexor muscles and the posterior tibial vessels and tibial nerve into the sole of the foot. IV. Myology. 8d. The Fasciæ Around the Ankle
  • It receives an expansion from the tendon of the Biceps femoris laterally, and from the tendons of the Sartorius, Gracilis, Semitendinosus, and Semimembranosus medially; in front, it blends with the periosteum covering the subcutaneous surface of the tibia, and with that covering the head and malleolus of the fibula; below, it is continuous with the transverse crural and laciniate ligaments. IV. Myology. 8c. The Muscles and Fasciæ of the Leg
  • Above, where it covers the Popliteus, it is thick and dense, and receives an expansion from the tendon of the Semimembranosus; it is thinner in the middle of the leg; but below, where it covers the tendons passing behind the malleoli, it is thickened and continuous with the laciniate ligament. IV. Myology. 8c. The Muscles and Fasciæ of the Leg
  • —Flexor accessorius longus digitorum, not infrequent, origin from fibula, or tibia, or the deep fascia and ending in a tendon which, after passing beneath the laciniate ligament, joins the tendon of the long flexor or the Quadratus plantæ. IV. Myology. 8c. The Muscles and Fasciæ of the Leg
  • The huge flowers are very showy with laciniated or fringed edges.
  • That species also has laciniate petals and is similar in many ways, however it is not found inland.
  • The finely laciniated foliage of = A. plumosus = is greatly prized for bouquets, and the plant invariably commands attention as a decorative subject on the table or in the conservatory. The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots 16th Edition

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