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"effuse" Definitions
  1. to pour out (a liquid)
  2. to flow out : EMANATE
  3. to make a great or excessive display of enthusiasm
  4. DIFFUSE

121 Sentences With "effuse"

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

"Effuse about how much you appreciated that clarity and how it helped you do your job better," she says.
Leaders of the European Union, from which Le Pen said she wanted to remove France, were explicitly effuse in their congratulations.
Even Hugues de Varine, a former director of ICOM and an early proponent of the "new museology" movement in the 1970s, found the definition effuse.
These iconic images, titled "Start Your Day with a Good Breakfast Together" and "Hang in There," effuse a comradery and humor that is often absent when we talk about reversing Western gender roles.
It is to effuse together about a particular move, to shout vociferously at the referee who, once again, has made a terribly unfair call, and, of course, to jump and scream when a goal is scored.
"De Sanguine Christi effuse" and some other treatises remained in manuscript.
The outer lip is slightly effuse. The columella is thin. The siphonal canal is extremely short.
The peristome is thin, simple, acute, effuse anteriorly. The umbilicus is narrow.G.W. Tryon, Manual of Conchology vol. VIII p.
The outer lip is curved, slightly effuse. The straight columella is white and shining. The siphonal canal is slightly elongated.
The sutures are moderately impressed. The aperture is large, slightly effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is very thin.
The outer lip is thin. The wide siphonal canal is somewhat more prolonged. The peristome is not very effuse. There is no columellar plication.
The umbilicus is narrow, partly covered by the strongly reflected columella. The aperture is ovate, effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin.
All are rendered pitted by the slender axial riblets. The anterior third is smooth. The aperture is broadly oval, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute.
The base of the shell is attenuated, and moderately rounded. The aperture is oval, and somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin.
The oval aperture is decidedly effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The thin outer lip is rendered sinuous by the spiral cords. It shows the external sculpture within.
The long, narrow aperture is white on the interior. The outer lip is slightly effuse and distinctly sinuous. The siphonal canal is wide and short. The columella is straight. .
The base of the shell is moderately long, well rounded and narrowly umbilicated. The aperture is broadly oval, effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse;. The outer lip is thin.
The grooves between the spiral cords are marked by numerous fine, axial raised threads. The aperture is oval, slightly effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is thin.
The flattened columella is wide, effuse at its base. The castaneous operculum is slightly concave within. It contains three whorls. The nucleus is situated at one-third the distance across the face.
The aperture is ovate, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle acute;. The outer lip is very heavy. The columella is strong, flexuose with a strong, broad fold somewhat anterior to its insertion.
The wide aperture is about two-thirds as long as the shell. The outer lip is effuse. The sutural sinus is more or less marked. The wide siphonal canal is short and straight.
The aperture is irregularly pyriform, and effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin, showing the external sculpture within. The columella is moderately stout, reflected, reinforced by the base.
The oval aperture is moderately large, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The columella is strongly curved, reinforced partly by the attenuated base, moderately reflected anteriorly.
The aperture is broadly oval and slightly effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin, showing the external sculpture within. The columella is moderately strong, slightly curved, somewhat reflected.
The aperture is elongated, often narrowed at its posterior part, widened and somewhat effuse at its base. The folds of the columella vary from one to three. They are generally thick and obtuse.Kiener (1840).
The aperture is ovate, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The columella is very oblique The columellar fold is decidedly posterior to the middle of the columella.
The aperture is oval, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is thin, showing the external sculpture within. The columella is slender, decidedly curved, somewhat reflected, reinforced by the base.
The sutures are well impressed. The periphery of the body whorl is somewhat angulated. The base of the shell is elongated, rounded, and marked like the spire. The aperture is ovate, and slightly effuse anteriorly.
The aperture is oval and somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The slender columella is slightly curved and somewhat revolute, provided with a weak fold at its insertion.
The base of the shell is moderately long, well rounded, and marked like the spire. The aperture is large, elongate-ovate, and somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is decidedly obtuse. The outer lip is thin.
Below the suture on the body whorl there are square white spaces left bare. The aperture is round. The outer lip is plain and slightly effuse. The columella has a very strong tooth near the base.
The periphery of the body whorl is somewhat angulated. The base of the shell is well rounded, moderately long, marked like the spire. The aperture is elongate-oval, slightly effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute.
The channels between the cords are very regular, marked by many slender axial riblets. The oval aperture is somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is thin, showing the external sculpture within.
The spaces between the cords and spire and base are narrow, marked by numerous, decidedly retractive axial threads. The sutures are well impressed. The aperture is broadly oval, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute.
The aperture is rather broad, suboval, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The columella is somewhat curved, strongly revolute anteriorly and having a weak oblique fold at its insertion.
The aperture is ovate, slightly effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin. The columella is strongly curved, reflected, reinforced by the base, and provided with a strong fold at its insertion.
The oval aperture is decidedly effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The thin outer lip is rendered wavy at the edge by the external sculpture. The inner lip is long, oblique, curved, and somewhat revolute.
The channels which separate the cords are marked by numerous fine axial riblets. The aperture is irregularly pyriform, and somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is thin, showing the external sculpture within.
The aperture is pyriform, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin, showing the external sculpture within. The columella is slender, curved, and reflected, provided with an oblique fold at its insertion.
The sutures are simple and well marked. The periphery and the base of the body whorl are well rounded and inflated, the latter somewhat elongated. The aperture is subovate, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute.
The aperture is pyriform, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The columella is short, curved, reinforced by the attenuated base, free only at its extreme anterior end. It has an oblique fold near its insertion.
The base of the shell is quite short, decidedly rounded, and umbilicated. The umbilicus is partly covered by the revolute columella. The aperture is large, very broadly oval, and somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse.
The spire is papillose and obtuse. The suture has a dark purple colour and is impressed. The columella is slightly oblique, shortly truncated in front. The outer lip is moderately arcuate, simple, not effuse towards the base.
The length of the shell attains 10 mm, its diameter 4.5 mm. This fusiform species is more effuse and inflated than its congeners. The shell contains 9 whorls including 4 apical whorls. The apical whorls are beautifully decussate.
The large aperture is effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is rendered sinuous by the external sculpture. The reflected inner lip is appressed to the base of the shell for almost its entire length.
The periphery and the base of the body whorl are somewhat inflated, well rounded. They are marked like the space between the sutures. The aperture is large, oblong-ovate, slightly effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is very obtuse.
The shell is convoluted, ovate, cylindrical, generally transversely striated. The aperture is oblong, entire, somewhat effuse at its base. It shows one or more folds upon the columella. The outer lip is thin, sharp, never having a varix.
The periphery and the base of the body whorl are inflated, well rounded, the latter decidedly contracted and narrowly umbilicated. The aperture is large, suboval, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is thin.
The aperture is irregularly ovate and somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse. The thin outer lip is angulated by the keels, showing the external markings within. The columella is strong, curved, without visible fold in the aperture.
The periphery and the base of the body whorl are well rounded, the latter with a minute umbilical chink. The aperture is ear-shaped, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is scarcely acute. The outer lip is very thick, reflexed.
The inflated base of the shell is rather short, narrowly umbilicated and marked like the spire. The aperture is broadly ovate, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin, and strongly curved in the middle.
These lines gradually become more crowded toward the umbilical region. The aperture is moderately large, suboval, somewhat effuse at the junction of the outer lip and columella. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin, showing the external sculpture within.
The species rhizomes are elongated. The culms are long with leaf-blades being of in length and wide. The leaf-blade bottom is pubescent, rough and scaberulous. It has an open panicle which is both effuse and elliptic and is long and wide.
It is marked like the spire. The large aperture is somewhat effuse anteriorly. The outer lip is thin and strongly curved. The inner lip is slender, decidedly curved and reflected, and provided with a moderately strong fold a little anterior to its insertion.
The suboval aperture is moderately large, and somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is thin. The columella is slender, curved, reflected partly over the moderately large umbilicus and provided with a strong, acute, oblique fold near its insertion.
The length of the ovate, dirty white shell attains 6 mm, its diameter 2.5 mm. A white, fusiform, very delicately-striated shell, with six swollen whorls, impressed at the sutures, obscurely longitudinally ribbed. The aperture is oblong. The outer lip is effuse.
The outer lip is simple, sharp upon the edge and effuse. It has, towards its upper part, an oblique fold, which seems to widen the aperture and partially forms the obtuse angle. The columella is almost straight, shining, and of a livid color.Kiener (1840).
The sutures are subchanneled. The periphery of the body whorl is marked by a strong keel. The base of the shell is well rounded posteriorly, effuse anteriorly. It is marked by six low, spiral cords, the two nearest the umbilical area being very faint.
It is on the body whorl alone, which is slightly effusely ventricose, that these gemmules appear, which are extremely beautiful microscopic objects. The aperture is wide. The outer lip is effuse and slightly incrassate. The sinus, sinuate just below the suture, is very broad.
It is marked by nine spiral cords which become successively weaker and closer spaced from the periphery to the umbilical area. The spaces between the cords are marked by numerous slender axial threads. The aperture is oval and effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute.
All of the incised, spiral lines on base and spire are crossed by very slender, axial threads, which lend these channels a somewhat pitted appearance. The sutures are well impressed. The aperture is moderately large, oval, and effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute.
The aperture is oval, effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin, showing the external sculpture within, rendered wavy by the keels. The columella is stout, reflected, reinforced by the base, and provided with a weak fold at its insertion.
The outer lip shows eight minute denticules. The sinus is wide and effuse. The columella is straight, and of simple character Melvill J.C. & Standen R. (1896) Notes on a collection of shells from Lifu and Uvea, Loyalty Islands, formed by the Rev. James and Mrs.
The aperture and the siphonal canal are long and narrow. The outer lip, before the carina, is effuse. The nucleus is white. W.H. Dall, Descriptions of new Species from the Coast of Alaska with notes of some rare forms; Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences ser.
The aperture is large, broad, subquadrate, and somewhat effuse at the junction of the basal and the outer lip. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is very thin, showing the external sculpture within. The inner lip is decidedly oblique, slightly curved and somewhat revolute.
The aperture is pear-shaped, rather narrow posteriorily, and somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is rendered obtuse by the tabulation. The outer lip is thin. The columella is short, curved, slightly reflected, reinforced by the attenuated base and provided with a weak fold at its insertion.
The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin, somewhat effuse. The slender columella is decidedly curved, slightly revolute, provided with a prominent oblique fold at its insertion. The parietal wall is covered by a strong callus which lends the periostracum an almost continuous appearance.
The base of the body whorl is well rounded. It is marked by six spiral cords which are of unequal strength, separated by grooves of different widths, which are crossed by fine axial threads. The aperture is oval, and effuse anteriorly;. The posterior angle is obtuse.
The spire is short and pointed at its summit. It is composed of six or seven very approximate whorls. The aperture is oblong, narrow, and a little effuse at its base. The outer lip is thickened upon its interior, smooth and sharp throughout its whole extent.
The outer lip is very effuse. The recurved siphonal canal is slightly produced. The shell is hardly shining and shows dark brown spots.Melvill J.C. Descriptions of twenty-eight Species of Gastropoda from the Persian Gulf, Gulf of Oman, and Arabian Sea; Proceedings of the Malacological Society of London. v.
The misquote ('to effuse/pour out one's thought upon/over wood'; a product of an old and habitual misreading of the word , 'squirrel-like' as , 'thought-like', and a change in the meaning of the word ) has become proverbial in the meaning 'to speak ornately, at length, excessively'.
They are crowded on the last whorl, do not cross the suture from whorl to whorl, and become fewer and fainter ascending the spire. The initial whorl is smooth. The aperture is very oblique and subcircular. The outer lip is effuse, fimbriated by the termination of the spiral sculpture.
It is ovate, oblique, iridescent within and lirate. The outer lip is convex, effuse on meeting the basal lip, with a sharp, finely denticulate edge. The columella is subvertical, with a slight swelling in the middle. The inner lip is expanded in a callous pad over the umbilical tract.
Its entire surface is marked by incised spirals like the spaces between the sutures. In addition to the spiral markings, the entire surface shows fine incremental lines. The aperture is elongate-oval, effuse at the junction of the outer lip and the columella. The posterior angle is obtuse.
The periphery of the body whorl are strongly inflated. The base of the shell is well rounded posteriorly, slightly attenuated anteriorly. It is marked by six well incised equal and subequally spaced spiral grooves which are crossed by many slender axial threads. The aperture is large, oval, effuse anteriorly.
The aperture is oval, effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse; The outer lip is thin. The inner lip is very oblique, slender, curved, and decidedly reflected, but not appressed to the base. The columella is provided with a moderately strong fold a little anterior to its insertion.
The remainder of the short base is marked by five less strongly developed keels and channels. The space about the umbilical region has faint, wavy spiral striations. The aperture is moderately large, and suboval. The posterior angle is obtuse, slightly effuse at the junction of the outer lip and columella.
The grooves between the sutural cords are equal, crossed by numerous, slender, axial threads, which cause the spaces between the threads and cords to appear as minute pits. The aperture is moderately large, somewhat effuse anteriorly;.The posterior angle is acute. The outer lip is thin, showing the external sculpture within.
It is marked by incremental lines and 8 rather broad, somewhat wavy, subequal, and subequally spaced spiral lines. The white color of these and the incised stronger lines on the spire stand out in marked contrast to the ground color. The aperture is elongate oval. The slightly effuse anteriorly posterior angle is acute.
The aperture is moderately large, suboval, effuse at the junction of the outer lip and the columella. The posterior angle is obtuse. The outer lip is thin, irregular in outline, showing the external sculpture within. The columella is short, curved, stout, bearing a strong, acute, oblique fold a little anterior to its insertion.
The periphery of the body whorl is marked by a strong, well rounded spiral cord. The base of the body whorl is decidedly attenuated. It is marked by seven subequal spiral cords, the spaces between which are marked by numerous slender, axial threads. The aperture is elongate- ovate, and decidedly effuse anteriorly.
The entire surface is marked by fine lines of growth and numerous very fine, closely spaced, wavy, spiral striations. The sutures are strongly impressed. The periphery of the body whorl and the base of the shell are well rounded, the latter quite strongly inflated. The aperture is broadly ovate, somewhat effuse anteriorly.
The aperture is pyriform, somewhat effuse anteriorly. It is channeled at the posterior angle, which is obtuse. The outer lip is thin, with a simple edge, decidedly arched in the middle, flattened on the side, showing the external sculpture within. The columella is stout, profoundly but distinctly plaited, reflected very much anteriorly.
The sutures are strongly impressed. The periphery and base of the body whorl is somewhat inflated, well rounded, the latter very frequently narrowly umbilicated. The entire surface of the spire and base is marked by vertical lines of growth and numerous exceedingly fine, spiral striations. The aperture is ovate, somewhat effuse anteriorly.
The shell is very fine and contains very close transverse striae, crossed by very fine and slightly apparent longitudinal striae. The spire is elongated, pointed and contains eight convex whorls to the spire. These are traversed sometimes by slightly prominent longitudinal folds. The aperture is very effuse, dilated outwardly and widely emarginated at its base.
The periphery and the base of the body whorl are well rounded, the latter narrowly umbilicated. The entire surface of the spire and the base are marked by vertical lines of growth and numerous very fine, closely spaced, spiral lirations. The aperture is large, oval and slightly effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse.
The periphery of the body whorl is marked by a narrow spiral groove. The base of the shell is well rounded. It is marked by six strong broad rounded almost equal and equally spaced spiral cords, the grooved spaces between which are marked by numerous fine axial threads. The aperture is oval, slightly effuse anteriorly.
The base of the shell is well rounded. It is marked by four low, broad cords and seven exceedingly fine incised lines, the latter about the umbilical area. The narrow, strongly incised grooves which separate the cords are crossed by numerous fine axial threads, which give them a pitted appearance. The aperture is oval, and slightly effuse anteriorly.
It is marked by twelve slender, spiral cords which are a little wider than the spaces that separate them and become successively narrower and more closely spaced from the periphery to the umbilical area. The spaces between the cords are marked by numerous slender, axial threads. The aperture is pyriform, and slightly effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is acute.
Its margin is more or less green tinged, not fluted. The columella is thickened and effuse at its base, callous posteriorly. The operculum is subcircular, concave internally, with a nucleus one-third the distance across face. Its outer surface is very convex, the center dark-brown, coarsely granulose, lighter toward the outer margin and more minutely granulate.
A narrow band appears about the summit showing its junction with the preceding turn. The periphery and the base of the body whorl is inflated and well rounded. The entire surface of the base and the spire is marked by very fine lines of growth and numerous microscopic wavy spiral striations. The aperture is rather large, somewhat effuse anteriorly.
The remaining whorls are moderately rounded, with a strong spiral cord at the summit and another one at the periphery, the two being closely appressed at the sutures. The base of the shell is prolonged, marked by low spiral cords. The aperture are irregularly oblong, decidedly effuse anteriorly. The columella is provided with a strong fold at its insertion.
The space between the keel and the edge of the lip is filled with oblique folds. The outer lip is simple, thin, sharp, and slightly effuse towards the middle.Kiener (1840). General species and iconography of recent shells : comprising the Massena Museum, the collection of Lamarck, the collection of the Museum of Natural History, and the recent discoveries of travellers; Boston :W.
The epidermis is greenish. The slightly pointed spire is composed of six whorls, which are slightly convex, and united by a pretty delicate regular suture. The aperture is oblong ovate and effuse towards the base. The outer lip is smooth and white, marked interiorly, at a short distance from the edge, with sixteen or eighteen transverse striae of a reddish brown.
Next, on the body whorl, below the periphery, the many—about 13—spiral rows of granules are quite close together, with no intermediary lines. The aperture is obliquely rotund. The outer lip is a little effuse, with four or five spiral short lirae just within the orifice. The columella is plicatulate above, and with a strong toothlike plait at the base.
The five whorls of the teleoconch are increasing rapidly in size, early ones well rounded, later ones less so, their summits being closely appressed to the preceding whorl. The simple sutures are well impressed. The periphery and the base of the body whorl are well rounded, the latter somewhat elongated. The aperture islarge, ovate, somewhat effuse anteriorly, milk-white within.
The growth lines are directed at right angles to the growth direction of the cone, but become flexuous or sinuous on the lower whorls. The base of the body whorl is well rounded. The sutures are well impressed. The narrowly oval aperture is rather large and occupies about ⅓ of the total length, and is somewhat effuse anteriorly The posterior angle is obtuse.
It contains some white spots, forming a sort of zone beneath the sutures. It presents also several varieties of color, and some specimens are found which are covered with small grayish points. The whitish aperture is delicately shaded with a pale violet, rather small, narrow, terminated by a straight siphonal canal, short, and very slightly effuse at its extremity. The outer lip is thin and sharp.
The periphery and the base of the body whorl well rounded, the latter somewhat inflated and marked by six spiral cords, which are successively closer spaced and a little less strongly developed from the periphery to the umbilical area. The channels between the cords are crossed by many very slender raised vertical threads. The aperture is oval, slightly effuse anteriorly. The outer lip is thin.
The outer lip is effuse, externally much thickened, deeply notched near the suture. The lip and columella in most specimens are dark ferruginous brown. G.W. Tryon adds to the above description that the interspaces of the ribs, in one of his specimens, are covered with fine revolving striae, and that another has a faint central band.G.W. Tryon (1884) Manual of Conchology, structural and systematic, with illustrations of the species, vol.
Prolific Scottish botanist Robert Brown described Panicum effusum in his 1810 work Prodromus Florae Novae Hollandiae et Insulae Van Diemen. It still bears its original name. Ferdinand von Mueller described Panicum convallium, which he recorded from the banks of the Torrens and Gawler Rivers, on the Murray River and along the Flinders Ranges, in 1855. Common names include branched panic, hairy panic, effuse panic, native millet and poison panic.
The basal lip is convex, slightly effuse, and smooth within. The upper third of the columella is concave, the rest is straight, and obliquely truncate below. The callus at the base partly borders the umbilicus and is attached to the columella along a vertical groove. The shell is purple-brown, with somewhat oblique, axial, creamy, rhomboidal flames, extending from suture to suture, and nearly equalling the foundation colour in area.
The channels between the keels are about equal to the keels in width and are crossed by numerous very slender raised threads, which extend up on the sides of the keels but do not cross them. About five of these threads fall in the space between two tubercles on the spire, in the first supra-peripheral groove. The oval aperture is large, effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse.
The periphery of the body whorl is marked by a spiral groove. The base of the body whorl is well rounded, and marked by eight spiral cords which grow successively weaker and closer spaced from the periphery to the umbilical area. The wide grooves between the spiral cords are marked by slender, raised, axial threads, which correspond to the ribs on the spire. The aperture is ovate and somewhat effuse anteriorly.
The base of the shell is well rounded, marked by six slender spiral keels, which are a little less strongly developed and more closely spaced at the umbilical area than at the periphery. The grooves separating these keels are about twice as wide as the keels, crossed by slender axial threads which correspond to the ribs. The aperture is ovate, somewhat effuse anteriorly. The posterior angle is obtuse.
The periphery and the base of the body whorl are inflated, the latter marked by lines of growth and eight strongly incised, punctate spiral lines, which are a little less strongly impressed and a little more closely spaced at the umbilical area than at the peripheral part of the base. These lines equal those of the spire in strength. The sutures are constricted. The aperture is very large, somewhat effuse anteriorly.
They are subtabulately shouldered at the summit, marked by numerous fine lines of growth and equally abundant, loosely placed, wavy spiral striations. These lines of growth and spiral markings give the surface a finely reticulated appearance when viewed under high magnifications. The periphery and base of the body whorl are decidedly rounded and inflated, marked like the space between the sutures. The aperture is large, suboval, slightly effuse anteriorly.
Unusually for a travel writer, Allan did not seem to have any interest in the old and did not effuse about scenery."Shorter Notices", The Times, 5 August 1938, p. 8. In England Without End (1940), The Times identified a tension between the down-trodden workers and greedy land-owners that Allan described and his natural appreciation of the landscape and buildings in which they existed."The Countryside", The Times, 14 December 1940, p. 2.
The eight whorls of the teleoconch are well rounded, moderately constricted at the sutures and narrowly shouldered at the summit. They are marked by numerous slender wavy spiral striations and fine lines of growth which give the surface a somewhat malleated appearance. The periphery and the base of the body whorl are strongly rounded, the latter narrowly umbilicated, and marked like the spire. The aperture is large, broadly oval, slightly effuse anteriorly.
On the antepenultimate whorl the spiral cord degenerates, and the radials are closer, rounder, and more oblique. Apart from this, the shell has, in general, a smooth expression, but a few faint spirals mark the base, while still fainter scratches traverse the rest of the shell. The aperture is narrow, protected by a heavy outstanding varix, anteriorly with a semicircular excavation, followed by a tubercle on either side. The siphonal canal is short, broad and effuse.
The intercostal spaces are a little wider than the ribs, crossed by four slender spiral cords, the junction of which with the ribs renders them feebly nodulous. The sutures are strongly impressed but not channeled. The periphery and base of the body whorl are well rounded, the latter marked by nine slender spiral cords, the spaces between which are crossed by fine axial threads. The oval aperture is slightly effuse anteriorly The posterior angle is acute.
In general shape and sculpture the type of this genus is reminiscent of Arcularia Link, 1807 (synonym of Nassarius Duméril, 1805), the protoconch is comparatively large. The fasciole runs between the wreath of subsutural nodules and the upright ribs. The canal is short, wide, and effuse. From Epideira Hedley, 1918, to which, it seems to be related, the larger protoconch, few and rapidly increasing whorls, the subcylindrical form and the shallow sinus of Awateria readily distinguish it.
They are marked by scarcely perceptible lines of growth, and here and there by a faint trace of some very fine microscopic spiral lines. The summit of succeeding whorls falls somewhat anterior to the periphery of the preceding turns, which gives a slightly constricted appearance at the well-impressed suture. The periphery of the body whorl is faintly angulated. The base of the shell is large, well rounded, narrowly umbilicated and somewhat effuse at the junction of the lip and columella.
The fourth spiral keel is strong and rounded and decidedly elevated, a very slender extension of the axial rib reaches across the deep spiral sulcus, which like the sulci of the base is crossed by fine, subequally spaced, raised axial threads. The base of the shell is moderately well rounded, attenuated, and ornamented with five subequal and subequally spaced, somewhat flattened, spiral keels. The suboval aperture is rather large, and effuse at the junction of the outer lip and the columella. The posterior angle is acute.
The base of the body whorl is attenuated, well rounded, and marked by eight subequal and subequally spaced low spiral cords, the grooves between which are crossed by many slender axial threads. The summit of the last whorl falls below the first basal keel and leaves this in the suture. On the last half of the last turn, an additional slender spiral thread divides the space between the first and second and second and third strong spiral cords. The aperture is pyriform, somewhat effuse anteriorly.
Hepatization is conversion into a substance resembling the liver; a state of the lungs when gorged with effuse matter, so that they are no longer pervious to the air. Red hepatization is when there are red blood cells, neutrophils, and fibrin in the pulmonary alveolus/ alveoli; it precedes gray hepatization, where the red cells have been broken down leaving a fibrinosuppurative exudate. The main cause is lobar pneumonia.Transformation from Red hepatization to gray hepatization is an example for acute inflammation turning into a chronic inflammation.
Psilolechiaceae is a monogeneric family of crustose lichens with effuse, ecorticate (lacking a cortex), leprose thalli formed by goniocysts (aggregations of photobiont cells surrounded by short- celled hyphae) containing Trebouxia or stichococcoid algae. The apothecia lack a distinct margin, and the asci are 8-spored and have a cylindrical to clavate shape. They feature a central, elongated tube-like structure, and a non- amyloid ascus wall surrounded by a thin outer layer. Both the tube-like structure and the thin outer layer stain dark blue in K/I.
They are marked by faint lines of growth and well incised spiral lines, which are not all of the same strength nor are they equally spaced. Six of these appear upon the second, and seven upon the penultimate whorl between the sutures. The periphery and the base of the body whorl are well rounded, the latter sculptured like the space between the sutures, bearing six incised lines which are not quite as strong as those between the sutures. The aperture is oval, effuse at the junction of the outer lip and the columella.
A supercritical fluid (SCF) is any substance at a temperature and pressure above its critical point, where distinct liquid and gas phases do not exist, but below the pressure required to compress it into a solid. It can effuse through porous solids like a gas, overcoming the mass transfer limitations that slow liquid transport through such materials. SCF are much superior to gases in their ability to dissolve materials like liquids or solids. In addition, close to the critical point, small changes in pressure or temperature result in large changes in density, allowing many properties of a supercritical fluid to be "fine-tuned".
They are marked by on the first whorl by 8, on the second by 12, on the third by 14, and on the penultimate between the sutures by 20 subequal and equally spaced, low, depressed spiral cords which are separated by narrower channels. The periphery and the base of the body whorl is inflated, sculptured like the spire by probably 20 spiral cords. In addition to the spiral sculpture the entire surface is marked by fine incremental lines which are best marked in the spaces between the cords. The aperture is oval and somewhat effuse anteriorly.
The columella is smooth and slightly twisted. The outer lip in adult specimens has a thin edge from the sinus to the anterior lower margin of the siphonal canal, with a well-marked varicose thickening behind, extending from the anterior canal up to and then round the sinus to the suture, where it thins out in a pad-like form on the inner lip. The outer lip is somewhat effuse anteriorly. The colour of the shell is white to creamy, with a pale or faded violet-brown broad band on the anterior slope of the body whorl, and a faint narrow band near the suture, and usually just discernible above the anterior suture of the penultimate whorl.

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