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43 Sentences With "becoming brown"

How to use becoming brown in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "becoming brown" and check conjugation/comparative form for "becoming brown". Mastering all the usages of "becoming brown" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"I view this work as lending a narrative of transport and movement, and even a process of becoming brown," says Takano-Chambers Letson.
But after exposure to the exercise-related hormone, some of the fat cells began to display molecular markers indicating that they were becoming brown.
When the fruit are ripe, these spines are red in colouration, later becoming brown.
The forewings are faintly reddish brown. The anterior portion is grayish, becoming brown posteriorly.
The ground color of the hindwings is white, becoming brown toward the apical margin. Adults are on wing in June.
These are stars that are closest to the boundary to becoming brown dwarfs (aka. failed stars) but still remain fully fusing stars.
The ovoid fruits are single-seeded and about 3 mm long, becoming brown and dry. The main flowering season is December to January.
Culm is pale green in color, which is becoming brown on drying. Surface is rough. Culms straight. Internodes are about 20–25 cm in length and 0.6–2 cm in diameter.
The ground color of the hindwings is semitranslucent whitish at the base, becoming brown in the apical area and at the margins. Adults are on wing in April, May and July.
The grassland is a joining of two soil types. In the east are prairie soils that are deep, and dark or reddish. From the west are chernozems of a chestnut, becoming brown. The chestnut soils are the dominant type across the areas.
The ground color of the hindwings is white, becoming brown at the apex. Adults are on wing in March (in the Bahamas), from April to May (in Haiti), from June to July (Puerto Rico) and in April and from August to September (the Florida Keys).
The caterpillar host plants are willows and poplars, in particular Populus tremula and Populus nigra. A. ilia either pupates in the same year or winters as a young caterpillar, becoming brown, stuck to a twig. The greyish green chrysalis hangs from a leaf or twig.
Spines on the cap underside are 1–3 mm long; they are initially white, becoming brown with grayish tips in age. The oval to spherical spores are 6–7.5 by 5.5–6.5 µm. The fungus fruits singly or scattered, on the ground in coniferous forests.
Framed photograph of Douglas C. Strain, on the wall of the science center named after him at Pacific University ESI was founded in 1944 as Brown Engineering, later becoming Brown Electro-Measurement Corporation (BECO).An Intricate History Spanning Two Centuries (company history). Electro Scientific Industries. Retrieved 2010-08-11.
Flowers Aloe lateritia is an acaulescent, succulent Aloe species. Its glossy leaves are light green, becoming brown- green in the sun. The leaves have thin white margins, and are covered in pale spots and patches. The underside of the leaves have much fewer, paler and more blurred spots.
Painting of a piglet born in the zoological garden in London in 1883 They are about long and stand at , with a tail of . They weigh . Their skin is dark brownish-black and the hair is dark. Piglets are born grayish-pink, becoming brown with yellow stripes along the body length.
Sometimes an attractive reddish colour can be seen in the deep bark fissures The leaves are finely textured and dark green. The abundant yellow flowers appear in early summer, or after good rains. The seed pods are narrow, flat and crescent shaped. They are green when young becoming brown and dry.
Occasionally the abdomens are nearly white in color. The cephalothorax is yellow to burnt-orange with a central dark line and dark lines down either side. The femora and patellae are orange. The other leg segments are yellow, becoming brown at the distal ends, as are all of the legs of the males.
The throat is white, and the underparts are off-white, becoming brown on the flanks and with a black breast patch. Young birds have a duller, indistinct head pattern, with brown stripes and a buff ground colour. They lack the rufous collar, and have streaked underparts. There are between 25 and 29 subspecies.
The costa of the forewings is pale buff, becoming brown proximally. There are six grey equally spaced weakly lunulate transverse fasciae, and traces of a terminal. The hindwings have five grey equally spaced weakly lunulate transverse fasciae and traces of a terminal fascia., 1968: A taxonomic revision of the genus Ditrigona (Lepidoptera: Drepanidae: Drepaninae).
The ground color of the hindwings is pearly white, becoming brown at the margins. Adults are on wing from March to April (in Costa Rica), from May to July and September to October (in Panama and Mexico) and in November (in Colombia). There are at least two generations per year. The larvae feed on Bourreria oxyphylla and Bourreria costaricensis.
The gills on the cap underside are crowded and have an adnexed attachment to the stipe. They are cream, with a slight greenish tinge in young mushrooms, and becoming brown with age. The spore print is brown. The white stipe is in height and in width, with a swollen base up to in diameter, and a white ring.
Although becoming brown and appearing woody with age, stems never become true lignified tissue, remaining succulent and fleshy throughout the plant's life. Under the right conditions, they may produce small white or pink, star-like shaped flowers in winter. The terminal inflorescence is a top round thyrsus with numerous dichasia. It has a length and a diameter of about 5 centimetres.
These markings are black, longitudinally elongate spots. The ground color of the hindwings is semitranslucent whitish, becoming brown at the margins beyond the middle and in the apical area. No host plant information is available, but oviposition evidently occurs into flowers, since all female specimens possess considerable pollen on the abdomen, a phenomenon not observed in any other Ethmiidae species.
Boletus subcaerulescens is a basidiomycete fungus of the genus Boletus found in northeastern North America. The fruiting bodies are found associated with pine and spruce. The cap is up to 18 cm wide, convex to flat, and brown in color. The tubes are yellow and stain blue (later becoming brown) when bruised, while the flesh is white to buff and does not stain when cut.
The animals' upper parts are purplish-grey to blue-black, while the under parts and areas around the eyes and ears can be brownish-pink. Their skin secretes a natural sunscreen substance which is red-coloured. The secretion is sometimes referred to as "blood sweat", but is neither blood nor sweat. This secretion is initially colourless and turns red-orange within minutes, eventually becoming brown.
The flesh, initially white before becoming brown in age, is firm and hard. It has no distinctive taste, and a "pleasant" smell. The spores are roughly spherical to pip-shaped, smooth, contain a single oil droplet, and measure 4–6.7 by 3–6 μm. The basidia (spore-bearing cells) are quite long, measuring 70–95 by 8–9 μm before tapering to a narrow base about 2.5 μm wide.
The pistillate scales are oblong-ovate, three-lobed, pale yellow-green often tinged with red, becoming brown at maturity. These scales bear two or three fertile flowers, each flower consisting of a naked ovary. The ovary is compressed, two-celled, and crowned with two slender styles; the ovule is solitary. Each scale bears a single small, winged nut that is oval, with two persistent stigmas at the apex.
It grows up to tall, forming loose clumps, with leaves up to long and about across. The underside of the leaves are typically slightly hairy, but may be glabrous (hairless), especially further west. The base of the culms and basal leaf sheathes are dark red when young, becoming brown as they age. Each flowering stem has between two and five spikelets that droop at maturity from peduncles up to long.
The leaves are obovate with margin entire and wavy, conspicuous net veining, crowded at ends of branches. Often with a single mis-formed leaf. The midrib has a yellow colour and the leaf has a brilliant green colour when viewed against the light. Fruit borne in clusters at the end of branches, yellow becoming brown, dehiscent with four bright red seeds covered with a sticky exudate with a faintly sweet smell.
When bruised or injured, the flesh turns bright red within 30 seconds, and later fades to brown. The odor of crushed flesh is mild and mushroomy. The gills are initially cream colored to pale pinkish or pinkish-gray before becoming brown, then dark chocolate- brown when the spores mature. In maturity, the gills are free from attachment to the stem, packed close together, with little intervening space between them.
Its fruit bodies have caps measuring in diameter. They are white but stain brown to reddish brown, hence the epithet, which combines the Latin words for "white" (albo) and "becoming brown" (brunnescens). The stipe measures long by thick except for the swollen base, which is up to in diameter. The top of the stipe has a prominent network pattern (reticulations) that diminishes as it extends down to over half its length.
Femora are cream coloured and gradually becoming brown to the tibiae, both femora and tibiae are spotted. Spines are also present, thirteen cream articulated spines on the fore tibiae; seventeen cream articulated spines with brown tips on the mid tibiae; and about thirty to forty-seven spines on the hind tibiae. Fore tibiae also lack tympanum. Adult males are characterised by the presence of bark, sclerotised hooks (falci) underneath the ninth abdominal tergite.
Dried involucres of Blepharocarya involucrigera Large terminal panicles of small, pale green to white flowers appear in the spring. This species is dioecious, that is, male and female flowers appear on separate plants. Fruits are small and flattened, around 4mm x 8mm, surrounded by small hairs on the marginal edge. They are enclosed within a green, fibrous involucre, which dries and opens to release the fruit, becoming brown and woody in the process.
Farmers reap the benefits of increased reseeding that occurs with increased bee activity, which means that future clover yields remain abundant. Beekeepers benefit from the clover bloom, as clover is one of the main nectar sources for honeybees. Colorful flowers of clovers, beside Zarivar Lake, in Iran White clover Trifolium repens, white or Dutch clover, is a perennial abundant in meadows and good pastures. The flowers are white or pinkish, becoming brown and deflexed as the corolla fades.
The male chooses a nest site, cleans it, and then advertises for a female by waving his crest and giving low rumbling calls. Once the birds have paired, the bond is reinforced through bowing displays and mutual preening. The nest is a loose construction of twigs lined with grass or straw. G. eremita normally lays two to four rough-surfaced eggs, which weigh an average of , and are initially blue-white with brown spots, becoming brown during incubation.
Past this, the road becomes a four-lane undivided road and continues past homes, narrowing back to two lanes. PA 130 enters Wilkins Township and heads through commercial areas with some homes, becoming Brown Avenue and heading south. The road continues through wooded areas with some development, heading into the borough of Turtle Creek and passing homes. PA 130 in Pitcairn The route curves southeast and passes under a Union Railroad line, turning east onto four-lane divided Osborne Street.
The ground color of the forewings is white, basally heavily spotted with shining gray or silver-blue on both the costal and dorsal areas. The ground color of the hindwings is whitish at the base, becoming brown towards the margins. Adults are on wing in February (in Trinidad), in May (in San Salvador and Yucatán), from June to July (in Veracruz), from July to August (in Sinoloa and Sonora), in November (in Venezuela) and in December (in Oaxaca). The larvae feed on Cordia alliodora.
The inner layer (190–250 μm thick) consists of interwoven hyphae that are thin-walled, hyaline (translucent), and 2.5–5 μm thick. The internal spore-bearing tissue of the truffle, the gleba, is initially whitish before becoming brown to purple-brown in mature specimens. It has many narrow whitish veins running through it. The asci (spore-bearing cells) are spherical (or nearly so), usually contain one or two spores (although less commonly there are three spores), and measure 60–90 by 50–80 μm.
The Shaw galaxias is generally dark brown overall, darker above the lateral line, becoming brown on the belly. The base colour is overlain with irregular somewhat diffuse blotches, more concentrated above the lateral line. The sides of the trunk have a moderately wide band of gold spots or flecks extending from behind the nape to about even with the dorsal fin, but sometimes extending as far forward as the head and snout. The head is diffusely covered with a scattering of small gold flecks.
It is an evergreen coniferous shrub or small tree growing to 6 m (rarely 10 m) tall, with a trunk up to 38 cm diameter. The bark is thin, scaly purple-brown, and the branches are irregularly orientated. The shoots are green at first, becoming brown after three or four years. The leaves are thin, flat, slightly falcate (sickle-shaped), 1–2.9 cm long and 1–2 mm broad, with a bluntly acute apex; they are arranged spirally on the shoots but twisted at the base to appear in two horizontal ranks on all except for erect lead shoots.
Clamps are common at bases of basidia. Its stem is around 124–137 (12.4-13.7 cm) × 16–23 (1.6-2.3 cm) mm, with a pale yellow to orange color in the upper part of the mushroom's stem with a light yellow on the ground, becoming brown to blackish with handling, stuffed, subcylindric to cylindrical, with irregular ragged patches and strands of orange-yellow felted to membranous material on the outer surface; the stem decoration becomes more intensely orange when handled. The ring is attached in the upper part, subapical, skirt-like, copious, membranous, persistent, orange-yellow at first, becoming yellow-orange.
It is a medium-sized evergreen coniferous tree growing to 20 m tall, similar to Taxus baccata and sometimes treated as a subspecies of it. The shoots are green at first, becoming brown after three or four years. The leaves are thin, flat, slightly falcate (sickle-shaped), 1.5–2.7 cm long and 2 mm broad, with a softly mucronate apex; they are arranged spirally on the shoots but twisted at the base to appear in two horizontal ranks on all except for erect lead shoots. It is dioecious, with the male and female cones on separate plants; the seed cone is highly modified, berry-like, with a single scale developing into a soft, juicy red aril 1 cm diameter, containing a single dark brown seed 7 mm long.

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