Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"floret" Definitions
  1. a flower part of some vegetables, for example broccoli and cauliflower. Each vegetable has several florets coming from one main stem.

267 Sentences With "floret"

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

We'd do this differently next time: Try breakfast at Floret.
Dip each floret in batter to coat and place on parchment paper.
Davey Havok will spear a broccoli floret with more grace than you could possibly imagine.
Interestingly, not every flower of the Queen Anne's lace bears the single darkly colored floret.
For this recipe, you have many options, as long as they resemble a cauliflower floret.
Julia Fish: floret continues at David Nolan (527 West 29th Street, Chelsea, Manhattan) through February 18.
There's a mini boutique downstairs for a midnight snack or impromptu souvenir, and the lobby restaurant Floret is fantastic for a meal.
The student, Trevon Grimes, had a temple-fade haircut so bushy on top that classmates compared his head to a broccoli floret.
Joe Ogrodnek, an owner and a chef, has announced plans to open a restaurant, Floret, in Sister City, a Lower East Side hotel.
Brush the cauliflower liberally all over with the butter, and where possible, try and get beneath the floret canopy to reach the inner sections of the cauliflower.
Interpreting island lore, Poh Lin's partner, Arthur Floret, tells their children that the jagged coastal rocks were created by a dragon to protect the island from humans.
Removing all the water from a floret of broccoli, for example, doesn't turn it into something new; it simply transforms it into a slightly lesser version of itself.
The executive chef working with Mr. Ogrodnek is Andrew Whitcomb, who will also run the kitchen at the hotel's ground-floor restaurant, Floret, to open in late May.
She is the cayenne pepper that Ben's season so desperately needs, even as he tries in vain to scrape off her high maintenance ramblings, one cauliflower floret at a time.
I ordered a giant roasted cauliflower floret smeared in a spicy Cajun rub accented with caramelized maple syrup, coconut sugar, a thick lemon cream drizzle and swaths of massaged kale.
Floret will follow the all-day dining model that has become ubiquitous in New York, from breakfast fare and coffee in the morning, to cocktails and larger dishes at night.
On one hand, the hexagonal tile (or "floret") is commonplace, but on the other it held symbolic meaning for Borges and Behrens because it is the unit found in every honeycomb.
The French architect Georges Floret built the five-room property; it has a contemporary aesthetic mixed with antique pieces and offers organic vegetarian meals, yoga classes, cultural workshops and Ayurvedic massages.
The "floret" refers to the patterning of the tiles, each of which is a hexagon, a shape that fascinated the Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges and the modernist German architect Peter Behrens.
Some of them will be familiar to the casual succulent caretaker: the floret-like echeverias, small cactuses and snake plants that many of us use as litmus tests for our green thumbs.
In this instance he captured the image at the Floret Flower Farm in Washington State by erecting a dark sealed tent, with a periscope peering out of its top, onto a wooden slat deck.
Is it better to wage war with your children in order to get them to eat a single floret of cauliflower or send them to bed with a bellyful — even if that belly is full of pepperoni pizza?
Setting out to restate the tiles in her site-specific installation, Fish prepared her composition by making five works on paper, which have not been exhibited until now: Julia Fish: floret is currently at David Nolan (January 11 – February 18, 2017).
Did you know that the word "floret"—as in a small, bone-white tree rising from the cream-like ground of a cauliflower—not only comes from Old French for "little flower," but was also the name of a cheap silk material.
Now, he will return to the kitchen as the chef and partner of Floret, an all-day cafe opening in January inside Sister City, a Lower East Side hotel from Atelier Ace that will take a simple approach to travel, with stripped-down amenities and minimalist décor (and because this is New York, a rooftop bar).
One of the superstars of this movement, the Skagit Valley-based flower farmer Erin Benzakein, of Floret Farm — whose upcoming classes sold out just minutes after she posted them and whose book, "Cut Flower Garden," out this month, had the highest presale numbers her publisher has ever seen — is responsible for inspiring a burgeoning generation to change their lives and take up farming.
Each spikelet contains one fertile floret, and usually one sterile floret.
Note the floret-like arrangements. Hematoxylin and eosin stain. Photomicrograph of Prototheca wickerhamii infection in a human. Note the floret-like arrangements. Gomori methenamine silver(GMS) stain. Photomicrograph of Prototheca wickerhamii infection in a human. Note the floret-like arrangements.
It is also long and wide with the branches being scaberulous. Spikelets are cuneate and are . They carry one fertile floret which have a bearded floret callus. Fertile lemma is keelless, membranous, oblong and is long.
Each spikelet has one fertile floret and one or two sterile florets.
The ray floret yields a fruit with a plumelike pappus, and the fruit from a disc floret has a more "bristle-like contorted pappus". ; SpeciesFlann, C (ed) 2009+ Global Compositae Checklist Barnadesia species records. Bolivia Checklist. eFloras.Urtubey, E. (1999).
The spikelets consist of a single awnless floret with a 3-nerved lemma.
Below the florets are two glumes, one long and the other long. The fertile floret has a lemma (bract) long, with three short awns (bristles) at the tip, and the sterile floret has a lemma about long with three awns about long. If pollinated, the fertile floret produces an oblong-elliptic brown seed long. When the seed is mature, the whole spikelet detaches, except for the two glumes, which remain.
The dual is called an order-7-4 floret pentagonal tiling, defined by face configuration V3.3.4.3.7.
Also they are elliptic and in length. They bear a few spikelets which are glabrous or ciliate and can range from in length. Compressed spikelets have only 1 floret which doesn't have rhachilla extension. It floret callus is elongated, bearded, pungent, straight, curved and is in length.
Each spikelet is made up of one floret surrounded by a v-shaped pair of smooth bracts.
The head contains many disc florets and occasionally a tiny yellow ray floret, though these are usually absent.
Saint-Floret is a commune in the Puy-de-Dôme department in Auvergne-Rhône- Alpes in central France.
Grandson of deputy, he was twin brother of Alfred Coste-Floret, who was also appointed MRP but for Haute-Garonne.
When it blooms, the floret has three reddish anthers and a short feathery stigma. If it is pollinated, the floret produces a nearly round seed long. At the base of the spikelet are two bracts (glumes), one of them long and the other long. The bracts each are long and tapered, with sharply pointed tips.
Paul Coste-Floret (9 April 1911 - 27 August 1979) was a French politician. He was born and died in Montpellier, France.
Odoardo Farnese (obv) and Placentia floret ("Piacenza flourishes")(rev). A coin from the 16th century features the motto: Placentia floret ("Piacenza flourishes") on one of its sides. The city was progressing economically, chiefly due to the expansion of agriculture in the countryside surrounding the city. Also in the course of that century a new city wall was erected.
Gaudeamus nos alumni Quod per infinita saecla Schola perduravit ipsa. Gaudeamus nos alumni. Floreat! Floreat! Schola Warwicensis Floret atque floreat Schola Warwicensis.
Haec domus duret per aevum Floreant omnes alumni Floreant semper magistri. Gaudeamus nos alumni. Floreat! Floreat! Schola Warwicensis Floret atque floreat Schola Warwicensis.
Calamagrostis nardifolia grows up to high, and bears a panicle of flowers, by . Each spikelet is long and contains a single fertile floret.
The cylindrical inflorescence is up to 12 centimeters long, each spikelet made up of one strongly beaked fertile floret and one or two sterile florets.
The lower floret has a three awned lemma. B. radicosa may hybridize with Bouteloua repens and Bouteloua williamsii, which could contribute to its apparent diversity.
It fertile spikelets are lanceolate and are . They carry one fertile floret which have a hairy floret callus which is over lemma. Fertile lemma is oblong and is of the same size as a spikelet, membranous and keelless. Lemma itself have an asperulous surface and dentate apex with the main lemma having awns which are over the lemma and are geniculated and are long.
Close-up of flower head showing purple stamen (3 per floret) and feathery stigma (2 per floret) Ligule is short and blunt Timothy grows to tall, with leaves up to long and broad. The leaves are hairless, rolled rather than folded, and the lower sheaths turn dark brown. It has no stolons or rhizomes, and no auricles. The flowerhead is long and broad, with densely packed spikelets.
When they are hatched, B. psenes larvae feed on hyperplastic floret tissue. The mother produces this hyperplastic tissue when she lays the eggs in the syconium.
Aponogeton distachyos or Aponogeton distachyum, also known as waterblommetjie (lit. trans. water-floret), Cape-pondweed, water hawthorn, vleikos and Cape pond weed is an aquatic flowering plant.
Its fertile lemma is ovate, keelless, membranous and is long. The floret callus is hairy with rhachilla internodes being pilose. The flowers have three stamens which are long.
The species' lemma of fertile floret elliptic to oblong and is long. Lemma is also obtuse or subacute, 7-nerved, hairless and scaberulous. The species' anthers are long.
In the center of the head are many yellow, bisexual disc florets of about 2 mm (0.1 in) long. In the center of the corolla of each disc floret are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. The style in both ray- and disc florets forks, and at the tip of both style branches is a broadly triangular appendage.
Only the upper floret of each spikelet is fertile; the lower floret is sterile or staminate. Both glumes are present and well developed.Flora of China Vol. 22 Page 504 黍属 shu shu Panicum Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1: 55. 1753. Flora of PakistanAltervista Flora Italiana, genere Panicum includes photos and distribution maps of several speciesBiota of North America Program 2013 county distribution mapsValdés-Reyna, J., F. O. Zuloaga, O. Morrone & L. Aragón Melchor. 2009.
A particular character of Gudelia that is rare among the Asteraceae is that florets are gender specialised, with the central floret being functionally hermaphrodite and the marginal florets being functionally male.
The fruit from each floret is a cylindrical achene up to long, not considering the large pappus of up to 50 hairlike white bristles which may be an additional centimeter in length.
There are up to about twenty medium or light purple, rarely white, ray flowers per head, each of which has a strap called ligule of approximately long and wide. These encircle numerous yellow disc florets, each with a crown of up to long. In the middle of each disc floret, the five anthers are merged into a tube through which the style grows when the floret opens. At the tip of both of the style branches is narrow triangular appendage.
During the blooming period, the staminate spike produces slender cream-colored anthers, aging to light brown, and each pistillate floret produces three long white, thread-like styles. The scales underneath the florets are dark purple.
The common base of the florets (called receptacle) is 3–4 mm across, has the shape of a shallow, slightly hollowed dome, which may or may not carry a scale at the foot of each floret.
The tip of each branch is swollen and bears a single large, pistillate floret while further down the branch are several smaller, slender-stemmed, staminate florets, the inferior glumes being half the length of the superior glumes.
The panicle itself is open, pyramidal, and is long. Both panicle axis and branches are scaberulous with solitary spikelets. The spikelets themselves are obovate and are long. They carry 1 fertile floret with it callus being glabrous.
The inflorescence is a solitary flat-topped woolly flower head containing many yellow disc florets. There occasionally appears a yellow ray floret, but they are usually absent. The fruit is an achene with a pappus of bristles.
Along the margin of the flower head are many female ray florets that have yellow straps of about long and wide radiating out. In the center of the head are many yellow, bisexual disc florets of about long. In the center of the corolla of each disc floret are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. The style in both ray- and disc florets forks, and at the tip of both style branches is a triangular appendage.
About twenty female ray florets have blue violet straps of about long and 1 mm (0.04 in) wide. In the center of the head are many yellow, bisexual disc florets of about 2 mm (0.1 in) long. In the center of the corolla of each disc floret are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. The style in both ray- and disc florets forks, and at the tip of both style branches is a broadly triangular appendage.
Swirl paperweights have opaque rods of two or three colors radiating like a pinwheel from a central millefiori floret. A similar style, the marbrie, is a paperweight that has several bands of color close to the surface that descend from the apex in a looping pattern to the bottom of the weight. Crown paperweights have twisted ribbons, alternately colored and white filigree which radiate from a central millefiori floret at the top, down to converge again at the base. This was first devised in the Saint Louis factory and remains popular today.
Like some other Ambrosia, the male and female flower heads are clustered separately on the inflorescence. The female head has a single floret while the male head contains several. The fruits are contained within a spiny bur.Ambrosia linearis.
There are 4 stamens in each floret, and 1 notched long stigma. The fruit is nut like, cylindrical and hairy, 5–6 mm in size. It has a tap root. The stem has long stiff hairs angled downwards.
Involucral bracts sparse (4-8), elongated (3.5-4 mm), usually without black tips. The floret ligules are narrow and long 5 to 7 millimeters (0.2 to 0.24 in) long and 1.5 millimeters (0.06 in) wide), occasionally becoming revolute.
They carry 1 fertile floret which is callus and glabrous. Florets have lanceolated lemma which is long and wide. It is also chartaceous and way thinner above and where margins are. Lemma hairs long while it apex is obtuse.
The lower sterile floret of the lemma is ovate and is 1 length of a spikelet which is also emarginate, membranous and mucronate. The fertile lemma is coriaceous, keelless, oblong, shiny and is long with involute margins and acute apex.
Their panicle is open and is in length. The main panicle branches are ascended or spreadout, while spikelets are pendulous and solitary. Fertile spikelets have filiformed pedicels, are cuneate and are long. They have 1 fertile floret which is diminished.
The blade is flat, folded along the midline or enrolled and 1–6 cm long which are up to 0.5 to 0.7 mm wide and have a stump tip. The spikelets consist of one fertile floret, which has 3 anthers.
The vast majority of Asteraceae have pentamerous florets, and several to many florets per flower head. Other asterids that have flower heads with only one floret are Corymbium, Hecastocleis shockleyi, Stifftia uniflora and Fulcaldea laurifolia, but these are pentamerous and hermaphrodite.
Fertile lemma is chartaceous, ovate, is long and keelless. Sterile floret is barren, ovate, and is clumped. Both the lower and upper glumes are keelless, oblong, are long, and have obtuse apexes. Palea have eciliate keels and is 2-veined.
The panicle is contracted, linear, long. The main panicle branches are indistinct, scaberulous and are racemose. Spikelets are oblong, solitary, long and have linear pedicels. Besides the pedicels, the spikelets have 1 fertile floret which is diminished at the apex.
Twelve to twenty bright yellow ray florets, tubes long, rays x with four veins. A dull-yellow to brown disc floret, corolla long, all hairless and expanding from the middle. ;Fruits and reproduction: Achenes long, ribbed with no hairs. Pappus long.
The tube is cylinder-shaped and has a few to many blunt hairs, which are several rows of cells thick and are topped with glands. The straps are white or cream-coloured, elliptic or obtuse in shape, mostly have four veins and is split in three teeth at the tip. From the mouth of the ray floret tube emerges a style that splits in two outward curling, hairless branches each topped by an obtuse conical appendage. Surrounding the base of the ray floret corolla are many, white, barbed pappus bristles which are quickly shed in the ray florets.
The bracts in the inner whorl are about 3 mm (0.14 in) long and mm (0.03 in) wide, eventually hairless and have an indistinct papery margin. About twenty five female ray florets have pale violet straps of about 5 mm (0.22 in) long and 1 mm (0.04 in) wide. In the center of the head are many yellow, bisexual disc florets of about long. In the center of the corolla of each disc floret are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft.
The whitish fluffy head of a dandelion, commonly blown on by children, is made of the pappus, with tiny seeds attached at the ends, whereby the pappus provides a parachute like structure to help the seed be carried away in the wind. Ligulate floret: A = ovary, B = pappus, C = anthers, D = ligule, E = style with stigmas Disc floret: A = ovary, B = pappus, C = anthers, D = style with stigmas A ray flower is a 3-tipped (3-lobed), strap- shaped, individual flower in the head of some members of the family Asteraceae. Sometimes a ray flower is 2-tipped (2-lobed).
Strapp steals the crew of his brother, Slipp and gives chase aboard his ship, the Shalloo, but they are all lost at sea when the ship sinks into a whirlpool called the 'Green Maelstrom'. As Joseph and company sail towards Castle Floret and Urgan Nagru, Slipp and Blaggut, his good-natured first mate, head into Mossflower Woods. When they awaken, Mariel, Dandin and Meldrum find themselves in the dungeons of Castle Floret, along with the battered Gael Squirrelking. With a bit of luck and the help of Glokkpod, a shrike, they manage to escape, but Mariel becomes separated from her friends.
Pineland three-awn (A. stricta) flowers Aristida is a very nearly cosmopolitan genus of plants in the grass family.Linnaeus, Carl von. 1753. Species Plantarum 1: 82 in LatinTropicos, Aristida L Aristida is distinguished by having three awns (bristles) on each lemma of each floret.
The main branches have 1–6 fertile spikelets which are located on lower branches which are also scaberulous. Spikelets do ascend and have pedicelled fertile spikelets. Pedicels are long and are straight. The fertile floret lemma is both chartaceous and elliptic and is long.
Each ray floret is up to 2 centimeters long. The florets are purple and have been described as "dark purple" to "lavender violet to dark reddish purple". The disc florets at the center are white and purplish. This plant blooms in October and November.
It also has a pilose and scaberulous surface. Fertile lemma is chartaceous, elliptic and is long. Sterile floret is long and is also barren, cuneate, and is clumped. Lower glumes are obovate and are long while the upper glumes are lanceolate and are long.
In botany, a plant is heterogamous when it carries at least two different types of flowers in regard to their reproductive structures, for example male and female flowers or bisexual and female flowers. Stamens and carpels are not regularly present in each flower or floret.
Cross-section of the syconium of a female creeping fig. The receptacle forms a hollow chamber, its inner wall (white) covered by a shell of rufous florets. Their long and curled, white styles occupy the centre. Each floret will produce a fruit and seed.
They also have scaberulous surface and are rough on both sides. The panicle itself is dense, open, linear, and is long by wide. The nodes are whorled and are long. Fertile spikelets are comprised out of 1 fertile floret which is diminished at the apex.
The panicles have curved, filiform and pubescent pedicels which are hairy above. The spikelets are orbicular, solitary, and are long. They are comprised out of 1 fertile floret which is diminished at the apex. Its lemma have ciliate margins and scabrous surface with obtuse apex.
The inflorescence forms a panicle. Some may be reed-like. The plants may be rhizomatous (underground stems with shoots), stoloniferous (with runners), or caespitose (growing in tufts or clumps). The bisexual spikelets have a single floret and generally they are purple or purple-brown.
Pleomorphic lipomas, like spindle-cell lipomas, occur for the most part on the backs and necks of elderly men, and are characterized by floret giant cells with overlapping nuclei.James, William; Berger, Timothy; Elston, Dirk (2005). Andrews' Diseases of the Skin: Clinical Dermatology. (10th ed.). Saunders. .
The tube nearer the base is glandular hairy in its lower half, the five lobes at the top are distinctly upright, loosely glandular hairy and have resin ducts along their margins. Sticking out of the center of each disc floret corolla are five anthers of 1 mm (0.06 in) long with triangular appendages at their tips, that are merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. The styles are dark red and exert far beyond the mouth of the florets. At the tip of both style branches of long is a triangular appendage of about long and wide.
B. psenes are parasitized by a nematode Schistonchus caprifici. These parasites are carried in the hemocoel of the female wasp. When a B. psenes wasp oviposits her egg inside the syconium, nematodes are also deposited. These nematodes then invade, feed, and reproduce inside the floret tissues.
It spikelets are elliptic, solitary and are long. Fertile spikelets have pedicels which are curved filiform, and scabrous. They also have 2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex with its rhachilla internodes being scaberulous. The floret callus is pubescent and have hairs which are long.
Carmen Coriense Salve schola te pia laude efferamus, pueri et pullae usque te amamus, O Corio praenitens ludo et labore, floreas virtutibus, floreas honore. Amne campo litteris praemium merendo, corde mente corpore pariter valendo, sic Corio praenitens laude non carebit, floreat ut floruit, ut floret florebit.
Gael is reinstated as Squirrelking of Floret with his family and Muta. While the other Redwallers return to the abbey, Joseph stays in Southsward to help restore order. Mariel, Dandin, and Bowly, their warrior spirits unable to be stilled, take off once more in search of adventure.
Enell graduated from the Stockholm School of Economics in 1930 had his own audit firm in Stockholm from 1937 and he became an authorized auditor in 1940. Enell was also a five- time Swedish floret champion and a four-time Swedish sword champion during the period 1921-1928.
Jasmin Wagner (, now Jasmin Sippel, born 20 April 1980), better known as Blümchen , is a German pop and dance music singer, actress, model, spokeswoman and philanthropist. Although she releases her English albums under the name Blossom, her German stage name "Blümchen" actually translates to "floret" or "small flower".
Kabuyea hostifolia has a corm that lacks a protective tunic. The leaves are all basal and usually number four, both the leaves and the inflorescence emerging from the same corm-scale, and being present simultaneously. The inflorescence is a raceme, each floret having white tepals and parts in sixes.
Along the outside are eight to sixteen spreading yellow ray florets, which are ovate, elliptic or egg-shaped, although about ⅛ is tube-shaped. Each ray floret is 1–2½ cm long, 2–6 mm wide, entire or sometimes with mostly one to three teeth at the tip and mostly four or five veins, hairless or with scattered multicellular hairs on the lower surface. In the centre of the flowerhead are mostly between twenty and forty (sometimes as few as eleven) yellow and urn-shaped disk florets, of 3½–7 mm long, which divide into five triangular lobes, ⅓ of the length of the floret, that spread or bend down, and do not have hair.
The anthers and curly styles protrude far from each floret, making the flower head look like a pincushion. The fruit is a compressed achene about half a centimeter long with no pappus.Flora of North America, White pincushion, Chaenactis artemisiifolia (Harvey & A. Gray) A. Gray, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts. 10: 74. 1874.
Spikelets are long and are both elliptic and solitary. They also carry both a pediceled fertile spikelet and one fertile floret which have a hairless callus. The glumes are long, lanceolate, membranous and have acute apexes. Fertile lemma is of the same size as glumes and is both elliptic and hyaline.
The head is spherical or egg-shaped, with sometimes as many as 700 disc florets, each floret yellow near the base but purple or brown towards the tip. There are also 9-15 yellow ray florets. The species grows in ditches, fields, and streambanks.Flora of North America, Helenium campestre Small, 1903.
C. caerulea is grown in the garden as an ornamental short-lived perennial, which may re-seed spontaneously. It prefers full sun with good drainage. It is drought tolerant. Several selections are grown, among which 'Amor Blue', 'Major', with larger flowers, 'Alba' and 'Amor White', white with purple floret tubes.
The leaves are in length and 8–30 mm in width. The inflorescences are specialised structures called pseudanthia, also known simply as flower heads, containing hundred of reduced flowers, called florets. The involucral bracts are coloured dull carmine, flushed with green. It is monoecious, with both sexes occurring in each floret.
In grasses awns typically extend from the lemmas of the florets. This often makes the hairy appearance of the grass synfloresce. Awns may be long (several centimeters) or short, straight or curved, single or multiple per floret. Some genera are named after their awns, such as the three-awns (Aristida).
Prairie dropseed is a perennial bunchgrass whose mound of leaves is typically from high and across. Its flowering stems (culms) grow from tall, extending above the leaves. The flower cluster is an airy panicle long with many branches. They terminate in small spikelets, which each contain a single fertile floret.
Spikelets are solitary, and carry both scaberulous pedicelles and 4-7 (sometimes 12) fertile florets. It also have a long rhachilla internodes which are hairy, while the floret callus is pilose and is long. The palea is long, have scabrous keels and a hairy surface with dentated apex as well.
The flowering stems (culms) are long. At the top are one to four, usually two, comb-like spikes, which extend out at a sharp angle from the flowering stem. Each spike has 20 to 90 spikelets. Each spikelet is long, and has one fertile floret and one or two reduced sterile ones.
Phytologia 83 (1): 312-330. The determining characteristic between the two is the presence of divergent awns, or hair-like projections that extend off a larger structure, such as the lemma or floret. These two subspecies have been known to hybridize.Daubenmire RF (1939) The taxonomy and ecology of Agopyron spicatum and A. inerme.
The panicle is open, linear, is long with scaberulous axis. Spikelets are obovate, solitary and have fertile spikelets that are pediceled. The pedicels are filiform, curved, pubescent, and hairy above. The spikelets have 1 fertile floret which is diminished at the apex while the sterile florets are barren, cuneate, clumped and are long.
Leaves are without petiole and directly attached to the stem, smooth margins and with thick hair underneath. Having more than one form of flower starting with a four-winged ray floret which matures into a one-seeded, one-celled, fruits which remain closed at maturity; an achene with the calyx tube remaining attached.
Hindwings dark grey. Meyrick, E., 1895 A Handbook of British Lepidoptera MacMillan, London pdf Keys and description Adults are on wing from June to July. The larvae feed on red clover (Trifolium pratense). The larvae feed on the developing seeds and build a case closely resembling a floret of the food plant.
The panicle is long and is inflorescenced, lanceolate, open and reddish-purple in colour. It have solitary spikelets which carry one fertile floret which have a pubescent callus. The spikelets themselves are elliptic, are long and carry filiformed pedicels. The species carry an oblong fertile lemma which is long and is keelless.
On top of the cypselas there may be two to five stiff scabrous bristles, which are equivalent to sepals (and are called pappus). Also, on top of the cypsela and within the pappus is a yellow, orange or white strap-like corolla which ends in five teeth, together comprising a ligulate floret.
Leaves are basal, lance-shaped basal leaves 2–3 cm long, with ruffled or nearly lobed edges. The inflorescence contains 3 to 15 flower heads on woolly peduncles. Each head is lined with yellow-green to purple phyllaries nearly a centimeter in length. There is no more than one ray floret; this may be absent.
There is one golden ray floret per phyllary, up to a centimeter in length and sometimes faintly toothed at the tip. At the center of the head are yellow disc florets. The blooming period is 3 to 4 weeks long, occurring in March and April. The fruit is an achene about 2 millimeters long.
The head is spherical or hemispherical, with sometimes as many as 800 disc florets, each floret yellow near the base but purple or brown or yellow towards the tip. There are also 9-24 yellow ray florets. The species grows in bogs, swamps, and other wet places.Flora of North America, Helenium brevifolium (Nuttall) Alph.
Sterile floret is long and is also barren, cuneate, and is clumped. Lower glumes are orbicular and are long while the upper glumes are lanceolate and are long. Both the lower and upper glumes are keelless but have different apexes. The upper glume apex is erose and obtuse while the lower glumes is acute.
Each head is on a very short or long pedicel, except in C. cymosum, where it is absent. Remarkably, each flower head contains just one, bisexual, mauve, pink or white disc floret. The florets are enveloped by two whorls of involucral bracts. The outer whorl consists of two or three short bracts at the base.
Fertile lemma is chartaceous, lanceolate and is long. Sterile floret is also barren, cuneate, and is clumped. Both the lower and upper glumes are keelless, lanceolate, and have attenuate apexes, but have different surfaces. The upper glume is long with pilose surface, while the lower glumes is long and is puberulous on the bottom.
The phyllaries (a bract under the flowerhead) has long spreading hairs. Each phyllary is associated with a ray floret. Species of Arnica, with an involucre (a circle of bracts arranged surrounding the flower head) arranged in two rows, have only their outer phyllaries associated with ray florets. The flowers have a slight aromatic smell.
Proboszczewice probably took its name from the provost. In 1375 Dobieslaw, bishop of Plock, granted the village of "Petro servitori nostri" in three fields, settling after floret from the annual rent and 6 grain measures. Records show the tithing, was 4 finches and 2 chickens (Cod. 85).Proboszczewice in the Geographic Dictionary Królestwa Polskiego. vol.
They bear woolly, cottony heads of flowers. They have narrow strap-shaped untoothed leaves. The flower heads are small, gathered into dense, stalkless clusters. The fruits have a hairy pappus, or modified calyx, the part of an individual disk, ray or ligule floret surrounding the base of the corolla, in flower heads of the plant family Asteraceae.
They also have 2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex and which are also elliptic and are long. The callus of the floret is pubescent and also has scaberulous rhachilla. The fertile lemma is chartaceous, oblong, is long and wide. Sterile florets are barren and grow in a clump, which is also cuneated and is in length.
Spikelets are solitary with fertile spikelets being pedicelled, pedicels of which are ciliated, curved, filiform, scabrous and hairy on top. The spikelets are elliptic, are long, and have 2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex. Floret callus is pubescent. The upper glume is lanceolated and is long and 0.9 length of the top fertile lemma.
Each head has a cylindrical base under a centimeter long and contains 9 to 12 light lavender or pinkish flowers. Each flower is a ray floret with an erect tube and a strap-shaped ligule with a toothed tip. The ligule is just under a centimeter long. The fruit is a cylindrical, ribbed achene with a white pappus.
The inflorescence is a wide open panicle of several flower heads. Each small head is cylindrical and narrow, its base wrapped in lance-shaped phyllaries. At the tip of the head bloom 3 or 4 flowers, which are ray florets; there are no disc florets. Each floret has is white to pale pink and has a toothed tip.
Like Hecastocleis, some other Asteraceae also have flower heads consisting of a single floret, such as Gundelia, a perennial herbaceous plant from the Middle-East, and Gymnarrhena a winter annual from northern Africa and the Middle-East. Both have male flowers and female flowers, not hermaphrodite as in Hecastocleis, while Gymnarrhena has (trimerous or) tetramerous male florets, not pentamerous.
Tumble thistles are assigned to the Cichorieae-tribe that shares anastomosing latex canals in both root, stem and leaves, and has flower heads only consisting of one type of floret. In Warionia and Gundelia these are exclusively disk florets, while all other Cichorieae only have ligulate florets. Gundelia is unique in the complex morphology of the inflorescences.
Lippmann conjectured a hypothetical Greek word ανθήμόνιον anthemonion, which would mean "floret", and cites several examples of related Greek words (but not that one) which describe chemical or biological efflorescence.Lippman, pp. 643–5 The early uses of antimonium include the translations, in 1050–1100, by Constantine the African of Arabic medical treatises.Lippman, p. 642, writing in 1919, says "zuerst".
Phytopathology 72:336-346. Nematode feeding on floret primordia induces rapid cell division, cell enlargement, and subsequent cell degeneration and collapse. The continuation of this process results in the formation of a large central cavity (in which the now-sedentary nematodes reside) enveloped by a gall wall. Gall size increases rapidly as nematodes grow and reproduce.
The emptied and dried floret functions as the first case, in which hibernation takes place. After hibernation, the larva switches to grasses, initially in its original thyme case. Later, a new case is made out of a mined grass leaf. This case is about 11 mm long, two-valved, straw-coloured and has a mouth angle of about 25°.
Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families They are rhizomatous, tufted, dioecious perennials, generally with terete, branching stems (Restionaceae more often have simple stems). The leaf sheaths are convolute and persistent. The male flowers grow in numerous spikelets borne in panicled racemes subtended by caducous spathes. Each floret is subtended by a linear or setaceous caducous bract.
Because the second college of the National Assembly was not directly elected, the Socialist party was able to use political strategies to secure 12 of the 20 seats from West and Equatorial Africa in the 1947 election (including making Moutet himself a representative from the French Sudan). When the RDA members arrived in Paris, they were provided significant support and advice from the Communist party (and particularly Aimé Césaire from Martinique) which relied significantly on their voting block. This bond was further strengthened when the coalition government named Popular Republican Movement politician Paul Coste-Floret as the Ministre de la France d'Outre-mer governing the colonies. Coste-Floret began an era of very rigid policy toward the colonies and particularly towards movements perceived to be pushing for independence.
The globose to ovoid heads are in diameter (excluding the stamens). On close examination, it is seen that the floret petals are red in their upper part and the filaments are pink to lavender. Pollens are circular with approximately 8 microns diameter. Pollens The fruit consists of clusters of two to eight pods from long each, these being prickly on the margins.
The head is very nearly spherical or egg-shaped, nearly covered with as many as 700 disc florets, each floret yellow near the base but purple towards the tip. There are also 12-18 ray florets, yellow, sometimes with purple streaks. The species grows along the edges of wet places in pine forests.Flora of North America, Helenium arizonicum S. F. Blake, 1937.
Its peduncle is long while the main branches are appressed and are . It have solitary spikelets which carry one fertile floret and have a pubescent callus. The spikelets themselves are elliptic, are long and carry filiformed pedicels which are long and scabrous as well. The species carry an ovate fertile lemma which is long and is keelless with dentate apex.
It produces one or more erect stems from a woody caudex. The serrated (toothed) leaves are 10 to 13 centimeters (4.0-5.2 inches) long around the middle of the plant and smaller higher on the stem. One plant will produce 25-50 bell-shaped flower heads. Each flower head usually contains one yellow ray floret and 4-5 disc florets.
If the supporting plants can compete successfully, all of the species continue. The green vines have few narrow leaves and are themselves photosynthetic. In early- and mid-spring, flower clusters occur in a circular or half-globe cluster of 7 to 13+ florets, with each floret about 3/8 of an inch. The flower clusters are sometimes profuse and therefore noticeable.
In geometry, the floret pentagonal tiling or rosette pentagonal tiling is a dual semiregular tiling of the Euclidean plane. It is one of 15 known isohedral pentagon tilings. It is given its name because its six pentagonal tiles radiate out from a central point, like petals on a flower.Five space-filling polyhedra by Guy Inchbald Conway calls it a 6-fold pentille.
The upper surface of the leafblades are often pubescent, yellowish-green or green, sometimes with purple spotting or tingeing at the margin. The uppermost leaves form bracts subtending the blooms. The flowerheads are about wide, cone-shaped at first and flattening out later, with the central florets opening first. The calyx of each floret is tubular and hairy, with five pointed lobes.
The flower shoot is a tall, broad cone, 60 centimetres (about 2 feet) tall, and 40 centimetres (16 inches) wide, with the flower heads horizontal. Each floret is about 25 millimetres (one inch) long, and the compound flower is made up of 11 to 15 of the petal-like ray florets, with thirty to fifty "disc" florets in the centre.
Only ray florets are female, others are male, hermaphroditic or entire sterile. Head involucres are campanulate to cylindric or attenuate. Floret corollas are usually yellow, but white in the ray florets of a few species (such as Solidago bicolor); they are typically hairless. Heads usually include between 2 and 35 disc florets, but in some species this may go up to 60.
Panicum hillmannii is a perennial grass that resembles the related P. capillare (hairy panic) in habitat and appearance. It is distinguished by slightly stiffer panicles, firmer foliage, the rachilla shortly developed between the upper and lower glumes, the sterile floret which has the palea developed; and larger darker fertile lemma (up to 2mm long) with a prominent crescent-shaped scar at its base.
Oliel is originally from Ramla, Israel, and is left-handed. He is Jewish, and his parents, Avraham and Floret Oliel, are Jews who are originally from Morocco."PM Netanyahu Meets with World Youth Tennis Champion Yishai Oliel", Prime Minister's Office (30 December 2012) He is the youngest of their five children. As a teenager he grew long, shoulder- length hair.
The leaves are linear (long and narrow) and up to 5 centimeters (2 inches) long. The inflorescence is made up of clusters of flower heads surrounded by gland-tipped bracts. Each flower head is a hairless bunch of small disc florets and 1 to 4 white to pink ray florets. Each ray floret has three lobes, the middle lobe being narrowest.
At the base of the ray floret develop eventually dark brown to black, dry, one-seeded, indehiscent fruits called cypsellae, which are oblong in shape, and have five or six wing-like, hairless ridges along their lengths. The ray florets surround many bisexual disc florets with a yellow, tube-shaped corolla that near its top splits star-like into five, outward curving oval lobes with a vein parallel to their margin, a central resin duct and a finely grainy surface near the tips. In the center of each corolla are free filaments, topped by five anthers that are merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. The anthers have an arrow-shaped base, and one large, oval appendage at their tip, that is wider than the anther.
The first stage of ergot infection manifests itself as a white soft tissue (known as sphacelia) producing sugary honeydew, which often drops out of the infected grass florets. This honeydew contains millions of asexual spores (conidia), which insects disperse to other florets. Later, the sphacelia convert into a hard dry sclerotium inside the husk of the floret. At this stage, alkaloids and lipids accumulate in the sclerotium.
The species' spikelets are long and are both elliptic and solitary with pedicelled fertile spikelets and one fertile floret which have a hairy callus. The glumes are long and are lanceolate, membranous and have one keel. They also have scaberulous veins and acute apexes. It have a hairy and long rhachilla and elliptic long and keelless fertile lemma while the lemma itself have a dentated apex.
Some species of Scabiosa are annuals, others perennials. Some are herbaceous plants; others have woody rootstocks. The leaves of most species are somewhat hairy and partly divided into lobes, but a few are smooth and some species have simple leaves. The flowers are borne on inflorescences in the form of heads; each head contains many small florets, each floret cupped in a membranous, saucer-shaped bract.
The disease cycle of loose smut begins when teliospores are blown to open flowers and infect the ovary either through the stigma or directly through the ovary wall. There are multiple mating types for Ustilago spp. so infection will only occur if two compatible mating types are present in the same flower. After landing in an open floret, the teliospores give rise to basidiospores.
Helichrysum pumilum, commonly known as dwarf everlasting, is a rosette herb from the family Asteraceae. It is endemic to Tasmania, where it is commonly found in the West and Southwest of the island state. It is distinctive by its inflorescence, with the flower stalk being densely matted in fine white hairs and the daisy-like flower head having numerous pink or white ray floret-like bracts.
The approximately thirteen female bright blue ray florets have straps of about long and wide. The numerous bisexual yellow disc florets have a corolla of long. In the center of each corolla are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. At the tip of both style branches is a triangular appendage.
About thirty female ray florets with a blue strap and a hairy tube. These encircle many bisexual, disc florets with a yellow corolla of long. In the center of each corolla are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. At the tip of both style branches is a narrowly triangular appendage.
The leaves are linear in shape and up to 5 centimeters (2 inches) long. The inflorescence bears bracts studded with large resin glands and small clusters of flower heads. The hairy, glandular flower head has a center of a few disc florets and one or two white or red triple- lobed ray florets. Each ray floret has three lobes at the tip, the middle lobe being shortest.
The inflorescence has many bracts at its base forming a green bell-shaped or hemispheric incolucre. The yellow petal-like ray florets are sterile and tend to have 3-5 lobes at the edge. The more central disc florets are perfect, containing several arrow-shaped stamen as well as a pistil made up of two ovaries. Each pistil has a yellow two-branched style which extends out of the floret.
The flower heads that develop underneath the leaves do not open and are self-pollinated. Each floret is fully enclosed in its involucral bracts, and the corolla shows very little development. The cypselas are relatively large and flattened, blackish in color, with ample hairs, and remain below the soil surface after the plant has died. Any pappus consists of somewhat scale-like bristles, hardly developed or is entirely absent.
At the base of each floret are numerous pappus bristles of two lengths, the shorter ones white, scaly, persistent and about long. When mature, the dry, one-seeded, indehiscent fruits called cypselae are dark brown with a lighter margin, long and wide, narrowly obovate in outline, with a scaly epidermis, and loosely evenly silky hairy. Felicia fruticosa is a diploid having nine sets of homologue chromosomes (2n=18).
See Blengini, di Torricella C. A. Haandbog i Fægtning med Floret, Kaarde, Sabel, Forsvar med Sabel mod Bajonet og Sabelhugning tilhest: Med forklarende Tegninger og en Oversigt over Fægtekunstens Historie og Udvikling. 1907. p 28. The time and place of Fiore's death remain unknown. Despite the depth and complexity of his writings, Fiore dei Liberi does not seem to have been a very influential master in the development of Italian fencing.
The first stage of ergot infection manifests itself as a white soft tissue (known as Sphacelia segetum) producing sugary honeydew, which often drops out of the infected grass florets. This honeydew contains millions of asexual spores (conidia) which are dispersed to other florets by insects or rain. Later, the Sphacelia segetum convert into a hard dry Sclerotium clavus inside the husk of the floret. At this stage, alkaloids and lipids (e.g.
The Cichorieae (also called Lactuceae) are a tribe in the plant family Asteraceae that includes 93 genera, more than 1,600 sexually reproductive species and more than 7,000 apomictic species. They are found primarily in temperate regions of the Eastern Hemisphere. Cichorieae all have milky latex and flowerheads that only contain one type of floret. The genera Gundelia and Warionia only have disk florets, while all other genera only have ligulate florets.
Vudi is the nickname of Mark Pankler (born 22 September 1952, Chicago), guitarist with San Francisco based indie rock band American Music Club. He is also the vocalist and guitarist in San Francisco based indie rock band Clovis de Floret. He also played guitar and keyboards with Swans on their 1995 tour, and hence appeared on the double live album Swans Are Dead. Vudi played on Red's Recovery Room.
These surround many bisexual disc florets with a yellow corolla up to long. In the center of each corolla are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. At the tip of both style branches is a triangular appendage. Surrounding the base of the corolla are many, white, serrated pappus bristles of about long.
Modern carpel numbers are more variable than the consistent five of Macginicarpa, ranging from four to nine. Photograph of Plataninium haydenii from the Clarno Formation of Oregon. Staminate flowers (Platananthus synandrus) have an even more developed perianth than pistillate flowers, but similarly have more consistent numbers of parts than the modern, with 5 stamens per floret. P. synandrus pollen appears to be smaller than pollen from modern Platanus.
Each disc floret has two lips, the outer of which is long, flat, and usually bright pink, and easily mistaken for a ligule. The fruit is a glandular achene a few millimeters long which has a pappus of bristles up to a centimeter in length.Flora of North America Vol. 19, 20 and 21 Page 74 Acourtia microcephala de Candolle in A. P. de Candolle and A. L. P. P. de Candolle, Prodr.
Individual florets have a pistil with a single ovary, surrounded by four non-showy perianth lobes, each with a single, sessile anther at its apex. The style is extremely wiry, but tough and flexible. This style both offers the pollen for distribution as well as accepts it from pollinators. Before the floret opens the sticky pollen is deposited on a special grooved area near the end of the style, known as the 'pollen- presenter'.
Golden thistles are assigned to the Cichorieae tribe that shares anastomosing latex canals in both root, stem and leaves, and has flower heads only consisting of one type of floret. In Scolymus these are ligulate florets, common to the group except for Warionia and Gundelia, which only have disk florets. A unique character setting Scolymus apart from the other Cichorieae are the dorsally compressed cypsellas which are surrounded by scales (or paleae).
The lance-shaped to oval leaves are each up to 15 centimeters (8 inches) long and arranged oppositely in pairs around the stem, their bases sometimes fused together. The edges of the leaves generally have tiny widely spaced teeth. The inflorescence is a large dense cluster of many very small flower heads, sometimes over 300 in one cluster. Each flower head contains 0-1 yellow or whitish ray floret and 0-2 yellow disc florets.
This plant is native to the eastern Mediterranean and the Middle-East. Opinions differ about the number of species in Gundelia. Sometimes the genus is regarded monotypic, Gundelia tournefortii being a species with a large variability, but other authors distinguish up to nine species, differing in floret color and pubescence. Young stems are cooked and eaten in the Middle-East and are said to taste like a combination of artichoke and asparagus.
The florets have five petals fused at the base to form a corolla tube and they may be either actinomorphic or zygomorphic. Disc florets are usually actinomorphic, with five petal lips on the rim of the corolla tube. The petal lips may be either very short, or long, in which case they form deeply lobed petals. The latter is the only kind of floret in the Carduoideae, while the first kind is more widespread.
The wingspan is 14–18 mm. The larvae feed on grasses (Poaceae species), including Bromopsis erecta, cock's-foot (Dactylis glomerata), Yorkshire fog (Holcus lanatus), crested hair-grass (Koeleria macrantha), timothy (Phleum bertolonii) and common meadow-grass (Poa pratensis). Young larvae eat the receptacle out of a floret of basil thyme (Acinos arvensis) and use the calyce as its first case. Before the onset of winter the larvae change its foodplant to grasses.
The part of the spikelet that bears the florets is called the rachilla. A spikelet consists of two (or sometimes fewer) bracts at the base, called glumes, followed by one or more florets. A floret consists of the flower surrounded by two bracts, one external—the lemma—and one internal—the palea. The flowers are usually hermaphroditic—maize being an important exception—and mainly anemophilous or wind-pollinated, although insects occasionally play a role.
Golden thistles are assigned to the Cichorieae tribe that shares anastomosing latex canals in both root, stem and leaves, and has flower heads only consisting of one type of floret. In Scolymus these are ligulate florets, common to the group except for Warionia and Gundelia, which only have disk florets. A unique character setting Scolymus apart from the other Cichorieae are the dorsally compressed cypsellas which are surrounded by scales (or paleae).
In irregular flowers, other floral parts may be modified from the regular form, but the petals show the greatest deviation from radial symmetry. Examples of zygomorphic flowers may be seen in orchids and members of the pea family. In many plants of the aster family such as the sunflower, Helianthus annuus, the circumference of the flower head is composed of ray florets. Each ray floret is anatomically an individual flower with a single large petal.
Golden thistles are assigned to the Cichorieae tribe that shares anastomosing latex canals in both root, stem and leaves, and has flower heads only consisting of one type of floret. In Scolymus these are ligulate florets, common to the group except for Warionia and Gundelia, which only have disk florets. A unique character setting Scolymus apart from the other Cichorieae are the dorsally compressed cypsellas which are surrounded by scales (or paleae).
Around the floret are a lemma and palea, each about long, though the palea is sometimes longer than the lemma. Prairie dropseed is a fine-textured grass with long, narrow leaves that arch outward, forming attractive, round tufts. The leaves range in color from a rich green hue in summer to a golden rust color in the fall. Foliage is resilient enough to resist flattening by snow, so it provides year-round interest.
The inflorescence is a series of dense clusters of flower heads surrounded by long, narrow bracts covered in obvious bulbous glands. The sticky, glandular flower head has a center of several disc florets surrounded by a few white, yellow, or red ray florets. Each ray floret has three lobes at the tip, the middle lobe being shortest. The fruit is an achene; those developing from the disc florets have a pappus of scales.
The stalk of each single flower is called a pedicel. A flower that is not part of an inflorescence is called a solitary flower and its stalk is also referred to as a peduncle. Any flower in an inflorescence may be referred to as a floret, especially when the individual flowers are particularly small and borne in a tight cluster, such as in a pseudanthium. The fruiting stage of an inflorescence is known as an infructescence.
Plants in the genus Olearia are small or large woody shrubs characterised by a composite flower head arrangement with single-row ray florets enclosed by small overlapping bracts arranged in rows. The flower petals are more or less equal in length. The centre of the bi-sexual floret is disc shaped and may be white, yellowish or purplish, generally with 5 lobes. Flower heads may be single or clusters in leaf axils or at the apex of branchlets.
The pedicels are filiform, curved, pubescent, and hairy above. The spikelets have 1-2 fertile florets which is diminished at the apex while the sterile florets are barren, cuneate, and clumped with its floret callus being glabrous. Both the upper and lower glumes are keelless, membranous and have acute apexes. Their other features are different; Lower glume is obovate, long and have an erosed apex while the upper one is lanceolate, long and have obtuse apex.
The base of the flower head (or receptacle) is flat and lacks a bract directly at the base of the floret. The corolla of the florets is pinkish purple when still in bud, but turns pinkish white at flowering, at which time it is about high. These are hermaphrodite, star-symmetric (or actinomorphic), and have five narrow outwards oriented lobes. The five pinkish purple anthers are fused into a long tube, that initially covers the entire style.
Disc florets in the overall genus can range anywhere from 12-172 in quantity, however, in contrast to ray florets, disc florets are actually fertile, and bisexual as well. Their colors differ on each part of the floret (i.e., the anthers are black or yellow, and the corollas are the same color as the ray florets). In S. calva, the dis florets are enumerated from around 90-154, with the anthers almost always yellow, scarcely black.
The tip of the ligule is often divided into teeth, each one representing a petal. Some marginal florets may have no petals at all (filiform floret). The calyx of the florets may be absent, but when present is always modified into a pappus of two or more teeth, scales or bristles and this is often involved in the dispersion of the seeds. As with the bracts, the nature of the pappus is an important diagnostic feature.
As she attempts to find safety, Mariel meets Egbert the Scholar, an old mole living beneath Castle Floret, who happened to find Rab and Muta and nursed them back to health. Psychologically damaged from their near-death battle, the two warriors are intense, but refuse to speak. With their help, Mariel finds her way inside the castle and lowers the drawbridge. At Redwall Abbey, the two rats have arrived and found refuge in the kind, peaceful Abbey.
Many female ray florets with a light blue, rarely yellow, strap, are long and 2 mm (0.1 in) wide, with a hairy tube. Many bisexual, softly hairy disc florets with a yellow corolla of about long. In the center of each corolla are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. At the tip of both style branches is a narrowly triangular appendage.
Stems, leaves, and bracts have dense, blackish hairs and exude milky juice when broken. The 1/2 inch (1 centimeter) flower heads appear in tight clusters at the top of the 1 to 3 foot (1/3 to 1 meter) stems with 5 to 40 flowers per cluster. Corollas are all ligulate and bright yellow. Each single flower head is an inflorescence and each petal forms its own seed, making them each a separate flower or floret.
In 1860, the floret of the merchant navy, named The Queen of the Angels (a three-masted ship of 740 barrels capacity), visited the port. Its role as a commercial port declined, and it is now primarily a tourist spot and a base for many well-known sail regattas. There is fast boat transportation with Les Bateaux Verts to Sainte-Maxime on the other side of the bay and to Port Grimaud, Marines de Cogolin, Les Issambres and St-Aygulf.
Gymnarrhena has aerial inflorescences that consist of many individual flower heads with disk florets which are either functionally male, with few florets each, or female with one floret only. This is a rare character combination, that is further known from the inflorescences of Gundelia. The latter however is a much larger, erect, thistle-like plant, which has latex and pentamerous florets. In Gymnarrhena the male florets (the only ones where a judgement can be made without enlargement) are (tri- or) tetramerous.
Later one new plant emerges (or sometimes up to five) from it. The common base of the florets (called the receptacle) does not have receptacular bracts (or paleas) at the foot of each floret. There are between five and fourteen infertile ray florets that have a base color that ranges between cream and dark orange. At the base there may be darker spots, sometimes jointly creating a ring, but sometimes only present on two or three of the ray florets.
There are many disc florets with a yellow corolla of up to long, in the center of each of these are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. At the tip of both style branches is a triangular appendage. Around the base of the corolla are many yellowish white pappus bristles of two different lengths. The longer pappus bristles are about long, toothed, with a long pointy tip.
The common base of the floret is flat or somewhat convex, and is without bracts subtending individual florets. Each flower head contains a hundred to two hundred very slender disk florets. There are usually, twenty to thirty male florets at the centre of a flower head, which are tube- to bell-shaped, with five lobes, the tube being about mm long, and the free part of the lobes about 4 mm long. In the male florets, the stigma does not split into lobes.
The spikelets have 1-2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex while the sterile florets are barren, cuneate, and clumped with both its rhachilla and its floret callus being pubescent. Both the upper and lower glumes are keelless, membranous and are of the same size as spikelets. Their other features are different; Lower glume is elliptic with an acute apex while the upper one is lanceolate, and have obtuse apex. The species' lemma have ciliated and hairy margins with obtuse apex.
The phyllaries can be free or fused, and arranged in one to many rows, overlapping like the tiles of a roof (imbricate) or not (this variation is important in identification of tribes and genera). Each floret may be subtended by a bract, called a "palea" or "receptacular bract". These bracts are often called "chaff". The presence or absence of these bracts, their distribution on the receptacle, and their size and shape are all important diagnostic characteristics for genera and tribes.
Antennae whitish, basal 2/5 clothed with hairs, basal joint with strong tuft. Forewings with apex falcate; yellow; a subcostal streak to before middle, a discal streak from before middle to 2/3, a streak along fold, and several short streaks between veins towards costa posteriorly and termen silvery-white, blackish-edged. Hindwings dark grey.Meyrick, E., 1895 A Handbook of British Lepidoptera MacMillan, London pdf Keys and description Young larvae eat out the ripe fruit of a thyme (Thymus species) floret.
These mature into fruit (sunflower "seeds"). The disk flowers are arranged spirally. Generally, each floret is oriented toward the next by approximately the golden angle, 137.5°, producing a pattern of interconnecting spirals, where the number of left spirals and the number of right spirals are successive Fibonacci numbers. Typically, there are 34 spirals in one direction and 55 in the other; however, in a very large sunflower head there could be 89 in one direction and 144 in the other.
In the center of each corolla are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. At the tip of both style branches is a narrowly triangular appendage. Around the base of the corolla are numerous yellowish white, toothed, persistent pappus bristles, which are all of the same length, up to about . Very rarely with a few short (0.2 to 0.3 mm long) basal scales represent short pappus.
Dianthus chinensis has a ' growth habit. ' tissue of Nicotiana tabacum growing on a nutrient medium in plant tissue culture Structure of flower of an orchid in genus Praecoxanthus, with the callus labelled Bearded callus of a floret of the grass species Chrysopogon filipes Dormant leaf buds of deciduous trees are commonly protected by imbricate s that are shed when the bud sprouts. Male ' of Betula pendula The ' of Dioscorea elephantipes grows largely above the soil surface. Many species that form caudices grow them underground.
When the disc floret opens, the style grows to about long, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. The upper 1–1 mm (0.04–0.06 in) of the style is split into two line- to ellipse-shaped branches with deltoid appendages at its tip of wide and long. Surrounding the base of the corolla of both ray and disc florets are two whorls of white to straw-coloured pappus bristles. The outer whorl consist of free barbed bristles of long that alternate with the inner whorl.
Corymbium is a genus of flowering plants in the daisy family comprising nine species. It is the only genus in the subfamily Corymbioideae and the tribe Corymbieae. The species have leaves with parallel veins, strongly reminiscent of monocots, in a rosette and compounded inflorescences may be compact or loosely composed racemes, panicles or corymbs. Remarkable for species in the daisy family, each flower head contains just one, bisexual, mauve, pink or white disc floret within a sheath consisting of just two large involucral bracts.
Each of the five individual anthers per floret has two spurs at its base, giving them an arrow-shaped foot. Like in all Asteraceae, the pinkish anthers are fused into a tube through which the style grows, while picking up the pollen that is released at the inside of the tube. The shaft of the style only has few hairs at its base. When ripe, the style opens into two branches of about ½ mm (0.04 in) with short stigmatic papillae at the dorsal side.
Lyons-la-Forêt is a commune of the Eure department, Haute Normandie in Northwest France. Lyons-la-Floret is well known within the region due to its architecture, which has been maintained since its founding in the 17th century. It is also a recognized distinct geophysical and geocultural entity that is the end of Vexin normand, and the forest of Lyons. The area around the town and the border with Pays de Bray is known for its traditional bocage landscape of woods, orchards, and cattle pasture.
The spikelets have 2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex while the sterile florets are barren, lanceolate, clumped and are long. Its rhachilla have scaberulous internodes while the floret callus is glabrous. Both the upper and lower glumes are keelless, membranous, and have acute apexes but have different size and description; Lower glume is obovate and is long while upper one is elliptic and is long. The species' lemma have eciliated margins while its fertile one is chartaceous, elliptic, and is long by wide.
Like other members of the family Asteraceae, they have very small flowers collected together into a composite flower head. Each single flower in a head is called a floret. In part due to their abundance along with being a generalist species, dandelions are one of the most vital early spring nectar sources for a wide host of pollinators. Many Taraxacum species produce seeds asexually by apomixis, where the seeds are produced without pollination, resulting in offspring that are genetically identical to the parent plant.
Three young orphans are acquired as well: the squirrel Benjy, the mousemaid Wincey, and the little ottermaid Figgs. They eventually arrive at Southsward and, with the help of some clans they meet on the way, arrive at Castle Floret, ready for battle. A massive battle ensues in which Mariel, Dandin, Meldrum, the otters, Finnbarr, Joseph, and the rest fight Nagru's horde of grey rats, most of which are slaughtered. However, the shrew Fatch, a good friend of Rufe and Durry, is slain by Silvamord, Urgan Nagru's mate.
Rab Streambattle, who had recently reunited with his wife Iris and regained his sanity, kills Silvamord in the moat shortly afterward for although she is a mighty warrior, she is unable to swim. In the final battle, Finnbarr Galedeep engages Urgan Nagru and kills him by smashing the fangs of his wolf skull into the top of his head. However, Finnbarr sadly dies from the wounds inflicted during the fight. With Urgan vanquished and his horde depleted, peace is restored upon Castle Floret and Southsward.
Far away, from the northern sea, the Foxwolf Urgan Nagru and his wife Silvamord arrive in Southsward, bringing two shiploads of rats, and storms the Castle Floret. Nagru, the Foxwolf, captures Gael Squirrelking, his wife Serena, their son Truffen and his nursemaid Muta, a mute badger. Entrance to the castle was gained through Silvamord's deceit in feigning weakness and ill fortune in both herself and Urgan Nagru. She then took Truffen the squirrel babe hostage until the gate was opened to the hordes of awaiting rats.
The inner whorl consists of feathery bristles of long, with or without barbs and fused at their base in a ring. The pappus extends beyond the disc floret tubes. The eventually brown, dry, one-seeded, indehiscent fruits called cypsellae are cylindrical to spindle-shaped, rarely egg-shaped in outline, about 3–4 mm (0.14–0.18 in) long and wide, with four or five prominently raised, mostly dark brown ribs. The cypselae of both ray and disc florets are covered with many shiny yellowish glands.
This culminated in the 1969 publication of The International Register of Dahlia Names by the Royal Horticultural Society which became the central registering authority. This system depended primarily on the visibility of the central disc, whether it was open centred or whether only ray florets were apparent centrally (double bloom). The double bloom cultivars were then subdivided according to the way in which they were folded along their longitudinal axis, flat, involute (curled inwards) or revolute (curling backwards). If the end of the ray floret was split, they were considered fimbriated.
An ergot kernel, called a sclerotium, develops when a spore of fungal species of the genus Claviceps infects a floret of flowering grass or cereal. The infection process mimics a pollen grain growing into an ovary during fertilization. Infection requires that the fungal spore have access to the stigma; consequently, plants infected by Claviceps are mainly outcrossing species with open flowers, such as rye (Secale cereale) and ryegrasses (genus Lolium). The proliferating fungal mycelium then destroys the plant ovary and connects with the vascular bundle originally intended for seed nutrition.
Research taken place in Mt Hut, Canterbury, found two flies fed on Chionochloa pollen inflorescences, including the eggs and larvae of Diplotoxa similis (Diptera: Chloropidae), which appeared in the inflorescences while they grew. The larvae primarily eat flowers, and most Diplotoxa similis young have pupated by the end of the flowering span, if not over the winter as adults. Another fly was an unclassified cecidomyiid, which lays its eggs in the pollen of the floret during flowering, hatching to early stage larvae. Late-stage larvae will turn to clear orange and are typically less active.
These encircle numerous disc florets, which are partly sterile, partly fertile, and have an up to long yellow corolla. In the center of each corolla are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. At the tip of both style branches is a triangular appendage. Pappus is missing at the ray florets, but surrounding the base of the corolla of the disc florets are six to eight, up to 2 mm (0.1 in) long, quickly shunted pappus bristles.
A spikelet consists of two (or sometimes fewer) bracts at the base, called glumes, followed by one or more florets. A floret consists of the flower surrounded by two bracts, one external—the lemma—and one internal—the palea. The perianth is reduced to two scales, called lodicules, that expand and contract to spread the lemma and palea; these are generally interpreted to be modified sepals. The flowers are usually hermaphroditic—maize being an important exception—and mainly anemophilous or wind-pollinated, although insects occasionally play a role.
Lemma is a phytomorphological term referring to a part of the spikelet. It is the lowermost of two chaff-like bracts enclosing the grass floret. It often bears a long bristle called an awn, and may be similar in form to the glumes—chaffy bracts at the base of each spikelet. It is usually interpreted as a bract but it has also been interpreted as one remnant (the abaxial) of the three members of outer perianth whorl (the palea may represent the other two members, having been joined together).
Palea, in Poaceae, refers to one of the bract-like organs in the spikelet. The palea is the uppermost of the two chaff-like bracts that enclose the grass floret (the other being the lemma). It is often cleft at the tip, implying that it may be a double structure derived from the union of two separate organs. This has led to suggestions that it may be what remains of the grass sepals (outer perianth whorl): specifically the two adaxial members of the three membered whorl typical of monocots.
Pappus of Cirsium arvense The pappus is the modified calyx, the part of an individual floret, that surrounds the base of the corolla tube in flower heads of the plant family Asteraceae. The term is sometimes used in other plant families such as Asclepiadaceae (milkweeds), whose seeds have a similar structure attached, although it is not related to the calyx of the flower. The Asteraceae pappus may be composed of bristles (sometimes feathery), awns, scales, or may be absent. In some species, the pappus is too small to see without magnification.
In the center of the corolla are five stamens with free filaments and line-shaped anthers fused into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens. The anthers have a shortly arrow-shaped base and no appendages at the top. The style sticks beyond the corolla, is round in cross-section, and splits in two style branches, which are coarsely hairy on outer surface. The dry, indehiscent, one-seeded fruits called cypselae, are line-shaped to elliptic, flattened in cross-section, and covered in long soft or coarse hairs.
In B. prionotes, however, seed release is triggered at relatively low temperatures: in one study, 50% of follicles opened at , and 90% opened at ; in contrast, the closely related but strongly serotinous B. hookeriana required respectively. Floret retention would therefore be to no advantage, and might even prevent seed from escaping spontaneously opened follicles. Seed release in B. prionotes is promoted by repeated wetting of the cones. The seed separator that holds the seeds in place is hygroscopic; its two wings pull together then wet, then spread and curl inwards as it dries out again.
In the center of each corolla are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. The anthers are 1–2 mm long, with small triangular appendages at the top. The style is approximately long with two dark red to purplish, narrowly elliptic branches of long, each with a deltoid appendage of about wide and long. Surrounding the base of the corollas of both ray and disc florets are many, whitish or straw-coloured, pappus bristles in two whorls.
In the center of each corolla are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. At the tip of both style branches is a triangular appendage. Around the base of the corolla are many white, toothed, persistent pappus bristles of about long, which become slightly wider towards the top. The eventually dark brown, dry, one-seeded, indehiscent fruits called cypsellae are inverted egg-shaped, about long and wide, the surface slightly scaly, and covered with short hairs.
The involucre may be narrowly cylindrical to half globular, and consists of at least three whorls of overlapping and gradually changing bracts. The common base of the florets (or receptacle) does not carry a bract (or palea) subtending each floret. The florets are all bisexual and may have either a ligulate corolla, a disk corolla, or a bilabiate corolla (three lobes merged to a strap with teeth at the tip and two lobes free much further down), and the lobes may be strongly coiled. The corolla can be yellow, orange, red, white, pink or purple.
Arms of Floyer of Floyer Hayes in Devon: Sable, a chevron between three arrows points downward argent; crest: A stag's head erased or holding in the mouth an arrow argent. Motto: Floret Virtus Vulnerata ("Virtue flourishes wounded") John Floyer (26 April 1811 – 4 July 1887) was an English cricketer with amateur status who was active from 1832 to 1833. He was later a Conservative Party politician who sat in the House of Commons in two periods between 1846 and 1885. Floyer was born in Stansford, Dorset, the son of Rev.
The primary difference between Goodyera and Spiranthes (A similar genus in the family Orchidaceae) is that Goodyera have elliptic leaves with white or pale green markings. Goodyera pubescens flowers in mid July-early September with a small spike inflorescence of between 10 and 57 cylindric flowers. The leaves have the white-green marbling in the form of veins throughout, broadly elliptic to broadly ovate (2.1-6.2 x 1.3–3 cm), with either an acute or obtuse apex. The peduncle (stem that connects the stalk to a floret) is 11–35 cm long.
In the center of each corolla are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. Around the base of the corolla are many white pappus bristles of about long. The dark brown, dry, one-seeded, indehiscent fruits called cypsellae are ellips- to inverted egg-shaped, about long and wide, with a marginal ridge, while the surface has some weak scales and is evenly covered in long hairs. Felicia elongata is a diploid having eight sets of homologue chromosomes (2n=16).
Approximately thirty female ray florets, have purplish blue straps of about 15 mm (0.6 in) long and 2 mm (0.08 in) wide, and are hairy in the upper part of the tubular section at its base. These surround numerous bisexual disc florets with a yellow corolla of about long, hairy in the middle part. In the center of each corolla are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. At the tip of both style branches is a narrowly triangular appendage.
Platananthus synandrus is also distinctive from extant Platanus for the elongation of its connectives, extensions of filament tissue that cover or divide an anther. In Platananthus and in modern Platanus, peltate (shield-like) connectives cover the tops of anthers, but the connectives of Platananthus are 4 to 5 times the length of the modern. Stamens are connate (fused) within each floret, causing them to be shed in clusters of stamen bundles, rather than one at a time as in modern Platanus species. Stamen bundles associated with Macginitiea have been put under the genus Macginistemon.
In the center of each corolla are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. At the tip of both style branches is a narrowly triangular appendage. Surrounding the base of the corolla are many, yellowish white, shallowly serrated, more or less deciduous pappus bristles, all about equal in length at . The eventually yellowish brown to reddish, dry, one-seeded, indehiscent fruits called cypsellae are oval in outline, about long and wide, with a weak ridge along the margin.
Dahlias are perennial plants with tuberous roots, though they are grown as annuals in some regions with cold winters. While some have herbaceous stems, others have stems which lignify in the absence of secondary tissue and resprout following winter dormancy, allowing further seasons of growth. As a member of the Asteraceae, the dahlia has a flower head that is actually a composite (hence the older name Compositae) with both central disc florets and surrounding ray florets. Each floret is a flower in its own right, but is often incorrectly described as a petal, particularly by horticulturists.
Zhang J, Zhang JP, Liu WH, Han HM, Lu YQ, Yang XM, Li XQ, Li LH (2015). Introgression of Agropyron cristatum 6P chromosome segment into common wheat for enhanced thousand-grain weight and spike length. Theoretical and Applied Genetics 128: 1827-1837 Plants with a translocation on chromosome 6P yield wheat of greater weight and longer spike length than those without the mutation. Agropyron cristatum possesses higher tiller number, higher floret numbers, and greater resistance to various pathogens such as wheat rusts, powdery mildew, and barley yellow dwarf virus than many of its close wheat relatives.
The approximately seven, deep blue ray florets surrounding the disc have a hairy tube, at the top changing into a spreading blade of about 15 mm (0.6 in) long and 5 mm (0.2 in) wide. The dry, one-seeded, indehiscent fruits (or cypselae) of the ray florets lack pappus. The many blackish blue, rarely brown-red and yellow, disc florets are bisexual and about 5 mm (0.20 in) long. Like in all Asteraceae, the five anthers have merged into a hollow tube through which the style grows when the floret opens, while gathering the pollen on its shaft.
The complex inflorescences are carried at the end of the branches. These consist of a number of crowded clusters. Each of the clusters is subtended by white to yellowish green, wavy, ovate to orbicular bracts that have a spiny margin, and further consist of one to five flower heads which each contain only a single disk floret. The most outward part of the flower head is the involucre, which is narrowly vase-shaped to cylindric and approximately high, and consists of about six worls of four bracts called phyllaries, which have often soft woolly hairs around the edge.
The leaves are long, and wide; the upper surface is glossy dark green, flat and hairless with longitudinal veins, and the underside is shiny and smooth. Annotated spikelet The young leaves are rolled when in bud, the auricles are small and the ligule is white and translucent, wider than it is long. The unbranched flower spike is up to long, with the spikelets on alternating sides and edgeways-on to the rachis (stem), pressed into recesses in the stem. The spikelets bear up to twelve florets, mostly with a single glume, with only the terminal floret having two.
Flowerheads are set individually at the end of a branch of up to 30 cm long, with a few small papery bracts, more densely set near the flowerhead. Flowerheads are enclosed in an involucre of 1½–2½ cm long, which has a diameter of 1–2 cm. The individual bracts are papery, egg-shaped, 1–2½ cm long, ⅓–½ cm wide, hairless and ending abruptly in a small sharp point as a continuation of the darker colored midrib. The common base at which the florets are implanted (or receptacle) is flat, with a scale subtending every floret.
The flowerheads sit individually in the axil of the leaves near the tip and stand on a stalk of ½–3 cm long. The involucre is ¾–1¼ cm long, the individual bract with a row of hairs along the rim. The scales (or paleas) set on the common base of the florets (called receptacle) at the foot of each floret are yellowish and up to 3 mm long. Each flowerhead has four to nine yellow ray florets on the outside with a tube of 2 mm long, and a strap of ¾–1½ cm long, tipped with three teeth.
Upper and lower glumes of Urochloa mosambicensis, a grass In botany, a glume is a bract (leaf-like structure) below a spikelet in the inflorescence (flower cluster) of grasses (Poaceae) or the flowers of sedges (Cyperaceae). There are two other types of bracts in the spikelets of grasses: the lemma and palea. In grasses, two bracts known as "glumes" form the lowermost organs of a spikelet (there are usually 2 but 1 is sometimes reduced; or rarely, both are absent). Glumes may be similar in form to the lemmas, the bracts at the base of each floret.
The “Clarno Plane” was established as an informal name to refer to the whole plant recognized from five fossil species: Macginitiea angustiloba (leaves), Plataninium haydenii (wood), Macginicarpa glabra (infructescences), Platananthus synandrus (staminate inflorescences), and Macginistemon mikanoides (isolated stamen clusters). The Clarno Plane is known from the west coast of North America across several states, including central California, Oregon, and northern Washington. Like the modern Platanus, Macginicarpa has clusters of five carpels per floret. However, in striking contrast to the modern, Macginicarpa flowers have a well-developed perianth and fruits lack the prominent dispersal hairs characteristic of the modern Platanus.
The outer bracts are about long and wide, lance-shaped, the middle bracts about long and wide, and the inner bracts inverted lance-shaped about 6 mm long and 1 mm wide. Each flower head contains about sixteen ray florets, with s pale blue straps of about long and 1 mm (0.06 in) wide. These encircle numerous disc florets with a yellow corolla of up to 3 mm (0.14 in) long. In the center of each corolla are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft.
The cross was discovered in 1912 during archaeological excavations in Anuradhapura. It is cut in sunk relief on the side of a smooth granite column of which a fragment was excavated. An immediate determination about the cross came from the Archaeological Commissioner of Ceylon, Edward R. Ayrton, who concluded that it was a Portuguese cross. In 1924, Ayrton's successor, Arthur Maurice Hocart, put more effort to clarify the cross and he described it in his publication, Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of Ceylon, as being "a cross of a floret type standing on a stepped pedestal from which emanates two fronds on each side of the cross like horns".
He had recorded the album in just seven days at Castle Sound studios in Pencaitland. Floret Silva Undique uses a poem by Hamish Henderson, who commented "What brave new music". The album had a "dramatic" impact on Scottish music. He provided the live musical score for David Harrower’s play Knives in Hens. He performed at the party held at Stirling Castle for the European premier of the movie Braveheart on 3 September 1995. He was back performing in the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall in January 1996. After writing scores for stage and television, he went on tour to America, supporting Wolfstone. He played at Edinburgh Hogmanay events in 1995 and 1996.
The album Mercury, produced by Mitchell Froom, followed in 1993 and, despite positive reviews (although Canadine considered it over-produced), the album only reached number 41 on the UK Albums Chart and got little radio and television exposure. In 1994, AMC issued San Francisco, which balanced confessional tunes like "Fearless" and "The Thorn in My Side Is Gone" alongside more accessible offerings such as "Wish the World Away". The band disbanded in 1995, with Eitzel concentrating on his solo career, having already released a solo live album and en EP as side projects. Vudi subsequently formed Clovis de la Floret while working as a bus driver in Los Angeles.
The inner whorl consist of only two, much larger, hairless or coarsely hairy bracts that usually are green in colour with purple tips or entirely tinged purple. The inner bracts form a sheath around the tube of the floret. The outer of these two bracts clasps the inner one, is keeled, split in two or three at the very tip, has three parallel veins along its length. The florets have a 5-merous star-symmetrical trumpet-shaped corolla consisting of a short tube near the base and five longer, spreading, oblong to line- shaped lobes at the top, and all contain both male and female parts.
Logo of the Conservative People's Party of Estonia right Flowering shoot of cornflower. I. Disk-floret in vertical section In folklore, cornflowers were worn by young men in love; if the flower faded too quickly, it was taken as a sign that the man's love was not returned. The blue cornflower has been the national flower of Estonia since 1918 and symbolizes daily bread to Estonians. It is also the symbol of the Estonian Conservative People's Party, the Finnish National Coalition Party, and the Liberal People's Party of Sweden, where it has since the dawn of the 20th century been a symbol for social liberalism.
Exon Domesday Entry for Sotrebroc, held by Floherus Arms of Floyer of Floyer Hayes: Sable, a chevron between three arrows points downward argent; crest: A stag's head erased or holding in the mouth an arrow argent.Vivian, p.344 Motto: Floret Virtus Vulnerata ("Virtue flourishes wounded") According to the Exon Domesday Book of 1086 in the section listing holdings of Terrae Francorum Militum in Devenesira ("Lands of French knights in Devonshire"), a man whose name was Latinised to "Floherus" (in French probably Flohère) held the manor of Sotrebroc in Wonford hundred, which later became known as Floyer Hayes.Thorn, Caroline & Frank, (eds.) Domesday Book, (Morris, John, gen.
Various stages in the life cycle of Claviceps purpurea fruiting bodies with head and stipe on Sclerotium An ergot kernel called Sclerotium clavus develops when a floret of flowering grass or cereal is infected by an ascospore of C. purpurea. The infection process mimics a pollen grain growing into an ovary during fertilization. Because infection requires access of the fungal spore to the stigma, plants infected by C. purpurea are mainly outcrossing species with open flowers, such as rye (Secale cereale) and Alopecurus. The proliferating fungal mycelium then destroys the plant ovary and connects with the vascular bundle originally intended for feeding the developing seed.
The early 1980s saw the commencement of coal exporting from the Ipswich region, with New Hope being one of the first companies to successfully obtain trials of Ipswich coal into the Japanese market. New Hope's first export shipment, 17,332 tonnes of Bundamba coal, was aboard MV "Floret" which sailed from the Maynegrain grain terminal at Pinkenba on 10 September 1980. Increasing export coal business dictated the need for a dedicated coal terminal, so a joint venture between New Hope and TNT Shipping and Development was formed to develop a coal loading facility at the Port of Brisbane. Queensland Bulk Handling (QBH) was commissioned at Fisherman Islands in 1983.
The Popular Republican Movement (, MRP) was a Christian-democratic political party in France during the Fourth Republic. Its base was the Catholic vote and its leaders included Georges Bidault, Robert Schuman, Paul Coste-Floret, Pierre-Henri Teitgen and Pierre Pflimlin. It played a major role in forming governing coalitions, in emphasizing compromise and the middle ground, and in protecting against a return to extremism and political violence. It played an even more central role in foreign policy, having charge of the Foreign Office for ten years and launching plans for the creation of the European Coal and Steel Community, which grew into the European Union.
Led by Rab Streambattle, the otters manage to rescue Serena and Truffen, but Gael and Muta encounter trouble. Unable to escape, Muta and Rab stand their ground against waves of Nagru's rat troops, fighting until they collapse under the innumerable odds, presumed dead. Dandin, Mariel and Meldrum survive long enough to fend off Nagru's last effort, two of his psychotic tracking ermine, called Dirgecallers, who were unleashed to track down the escape prisoners. Mariel and her companions manage to kill the trackers, allowing Serena and Truffen to escape to safety, but they are not able to avoid Nagru's rat troops, as they are captured and led back to Castle Floret.
In the center of each corolla are five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. At the tip of both style branches is a narrowly triangular appendage. Around the base of the corolla are numerous, yellowish white, short-toothed, persistent pappus bristles, which are all of the same length, up to about . The dry, one- seeded, indehiscent fruits called cypsellae are dark brown with a yellowish brown ridge along the outline, elliptic, about 3 mm long and 1 mm wide, thinly silky haired but densely hairy on the edge, and the hairs seldomly wear off.
F. amoena subsp. latifolia, is a taxon which sometimes has a blue disc, but yellow discs are more commonFelicia filifolia, showing disc florets turning pinkish brown when agingThe flowerheads have two rows of involucral bracts in almost all species of the section Neodetris (the exceptions being F. cymbalariae, F. denticulata, F. dubia and F. tenera), while the rest of the species have three or four rows of bracts. The communal base (or receptacle) on which the individual florets are implanted is lightly convex and lacks a receptacular bract (or palea) at the foot of each floret. Almost always, one row of female ligulate florets surrounds a centre of several rows of bisexual disc florets.
In the center of each corolla are five free filaments and five anthers merged into a tube, through which the style grows when the floret opens, hoovering up the pollen on its shaft. At the tip of both style branches is a triangular appendage. Around the base of the corolla is one whorl of vigorous, equally long, white, shortly toothed, but smooth at their base, largely persistent pappus bristles of about long. The eventually black, dry, one-seeded, indehiscent fruits called cypsellae are inverted egg-shaped to elliptic, about long and 1½ mm (0.06 in) wide, have a ridge along the outline, are hairless or rarely have a few bristles near the top, and a further smooth seedskin.
The communal base (or receptacle) on which the individual florets are implanted is flat, deeply pitted, and lacks receptacular bracts (or palea) at the foot of the florets. The eight or nine white or cream-coloured ray florets surrounding the disc are female only, have a cylindrical tube of 2½–3 mm (0.10–0.12 in) long with some glandular hairs, at the top changing into a spreading, elliptic or inverted lance-shaped blade of 10–12 mm (0.40–0.48 in) long and 4–6 mm (0.16–0.24 in) wide with four veins running along its length. At the base of each ray floret is a narrowly elliptic ovary with hairs pressed to its surface.
The tube has glandular hairs, is cylinder-shaped, 2½–3 mm long, widening a bit towards the upper end, where it splits into five back- curving triangular lobes of about 1 mm long and ¾ mm wide at its base, with thickened margins. Like in all Asteraceae, the five anthers have merged into a hollow tube through which the style grows with the floret opens, while gathering the pollen on its shaft. The anthers produce cream-coloured pollen, are themselves deep blue, about 2 mm long, including the oval, slightly keeled appendage at the top, while the base is blunt without an appendage. The ovary under the tube florets are narrowly elliptic, also with hairs pressed against its surface.
The bracts in the inner whorl are long and wide, eventually hairless. Each flower head contains twelve to sixteen pink, functionally female ray florets, with a closed tube at the base of about long set with some glandular hairs, and with a line-shaped strap that radiates out from the head of long, bluntly ending in three lobes, narrower towards the base, and with five to seven veins. From the mouth of the ray floret tubes extends a tube consisting of five infertile staminodes, through which a forked style grows. The ray florets surround many bisexual disc florets with a yellow corolla of about long, which is only slightly longer than the pappus.
The stigma, where the pollen must go, is an extremely small, microscopic groove or slit at the very tip of the style. The floret is structured in such a way as to require that the pollen be physically transported to the stigma, presumably to promote outcrossing, despite the short distance between the stigma and the pollen presenter on the style and the fact that proteas appear to be self-compatible (although many protea are dichogamous/protandrous, the pollen remains viable for several days). As the flower bud grows, but before the flower opens (anthesis), the base of the style swells and eventually ruptures through the perianth. Anthesis, when the anthers and perianth unfold and the style is exserted, is mildly explosive.
Computations can be jointly executed by a cluster of co-operating P3 processes. This cluster is in many ways analalogous to a multicellular organism: like cells within an organisms, individual P3 processes can specialise. For example, in the case of the Daisy pattern recognition system, the cluster consists of (ipm) processes which pre-process pattern-data, (floret) processes which run the PSOM neural nets used to classify those patterns, and (vhtml) processes which communicate the identity of patterns Daisy has discovered to the user. In addition, the Daisy cluster also has specialist (maggot and kepher) processes to clear and recycle file and memory space and (lyosome) processes which destroy and replace other processes within the cluster which have become corrupted and therefore non functional.
They confirmed earlier results that the primary difference in ray flowers was due to a single gene. However, they also found a novel floret called "gibbous," and demonstrated that there were numerous gene differences between the species that affected the ray florets size, shape, and color. They concluded: > Characterization of evolutionary morphological changes as major or minor is > illusory unless founded on genetic analysis: the demonstration that the > absence of ray florets in L. discoidea is conferred by a simple genetic > difference shows that this was not a large change despite the accretion of a > considerable number of differences between the species. The discovery of > gibbous fiorets has particular interest because it demonstrates that novel > combinations of developmental processes can be readily assimilated without > evident adverse effects.
Along with the French Socialist Party, it was the most energetic supporter in the country of European integration. It was also a strong backer of NATO and of close alliance with the United States, making it the most "Atlanticist" of French political parties. Its leaders, especially Georges Bidault and Paul Coste- Floret (foreign and colonial ministers respectively in several French coalition governments) were primary architects of France's hard-line colonial policies that culminated in long insurgencies in Vietnam (1946-1954) and Algeria (1954-1962), as well as a series of smaller insurrections and political crises elsewhere in the French Empire. The MRP eventually divided over the Algerian question in the late 1950s (with Bidault being an avid supporter of the OAS).
The Popular Republican Movement (MRP), a large moderate party based on the Catholic vote, dominated French foreign and colonial policies during most of the later 1940s and 1950s. Along with the French Socialist Party, it was the most energetic supporter in the country of European integration. It was also a strong backer of NATO and of close alliance with the United States, making it the most "Atlanticist" of French political parties. Its leaders, especially Georges Bidault and Paul Coste-Floret (foreign and colonial ministers respectively in several French coalition governments) were primary architects of France's hard-line colonial policies that culminated in long insurgencies in Vietnam (1946–1954) and Algeria (1954–1962), as well as a series of smaller insurrections and political crises elsewhere in the French Empire.
The style of each ray floret is up to long, the upper is split into two line- to ellipse-shaped branches. The ray florets do not contain staminodes. In the center of the head are many bisexual disc florets that are shorter than the longest pappus bristles, and these florets consist of a tube at their base of long, with some irregularly spread glandular hairs, and five upright or recurved triangular lobes of about long, and often have a resin duct along their margin, and sometimes set with long hairs and shiny glands with rounded tips. The five anthers, which are, as is usual in the entire family Asteraceae, fused in a tube, are about 1–2 mm (0.06–0.08 in) long, each with a triangular appendage of about mm (0.02 in) at their tip.
In 1967, notes were introduced in denominations of $1, $2, $5, $10, $20 and $100, with all except the $5 replacing their pound predecessors. The original series of dollar notes featured on the obverse a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II wearing Queen Alexandra's Kokoshnik tiara, King George's VI festoon necklace, and Queen Mary's floret earrings, while the reverse featured native birds and plants. The notes were changed slightly in 1981 due to a change of printer (from De La Rue to Bradbury, Wilkinson & Co.)—the most noticeable difference being the portrait based upon a photograph by Peter Grugeon, in which Queen Elizabeth II is wearing Grand Duchess Vladimir's tiara and Queen Victoria's golden jubilee necklace. The $50 note was added in 1983 to fill the long gap between the $20 and the $100 notes.
The flowerhead has an involucre that is initially cup-shaped with a flat base, later becomes broadly cone-shaped, while the bracts eventually flip down to press against the stem when the seeds are ripe. It consists of a single whorl of eleven to fifteen lance-shaped, leathery bracts, with one or three resin ducts tapering to a long point, that are merged at their base, with a distinct thin and dryish margin that has a fringe of soft hairs towards the tips. The common base of the florets is flat and wide, without bracts at the foot of each floret, with a smooth surface except for regularly distributed indents where the florets are implanted. The flower heads each have five to eight female ray florets that consist of a closed tube at base and a strap nearer the top.
Napoleon said he wanted "a Kaunitz", and whether he literally meant someone from the or merely someone in the style of the Prince of Kaunitz, who had been ambassador to France from 1750 until 1753, this worked in favour of Metternich, the husband of a Kaunitz . He enjoyed being in demand and was happy to be sent to France on a generous salary of 90,000 gulden a year. After an arduous trip he took up residence in August 1806, being briefed by Baron von Vincent and Engelbert von Floret, whom he would retain as a close adviser for two decades. He met French foreign minister Prince Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord on 5 August and Napoleon himself five days later at Saint-Cloud; soon, the War of the Fourth Coalition drew both Talleyrand and Napoleon eastwards.
Each individual floret is bisexual, with a yellow, star- symmetric corolla of 22–25 mm long, consisting of a narrow, straight or S-shaped tube of 10–11 mm long, which abruptly widens into a deeply 5-lobed bell, the twisting lobes being 7–8 mm long, softly haired, with twin hairs and glandular hairs consisting of two piles of a few cells, while the tip is adorned with a tuft of hairs. Like in all asteraceae the five anthers are fused into a tube, through which the style grows, picking up the pollen on hairs along its length. The anthers in Warionia are yellow, 11–12 mm long, their base reaching 1½–2 mm below the attachment to the yellow hearless filaments, and the acute tips reaches 2 mm above the merged tube. The pollen grains are large, approximately globular, tricolpate, carrying spines and with perforations between the spines.
It has been used to cross-breed with other species of grass and wheat to transfer a greater disease resistance to them, as well as enhance their properties as a food source. This cross-breeding involves the transferring of the chromosome 6P translocation to the species it is cross- breeding with. Chromosome 6P of A. cristatum has also been proven to play an important role in regulating fertile tiller number and it possesses positive and negative regulators of tiller number.Ye XL, Lu YQ, Liu WH, Chen GY, Han HM, Zhang JP, Yang XM, Li XQ, Gao AN, Li LH (2015). The effects of chromosome 6P on fertile tiller number of wheat as revealed in wheat-Agropyron cristatum chromosome 5A/6P translocation lines. Theoretical and Applied Genetics 128: 797-811. These regulators were specifically found to be on the 6PS and 6PL chromosome arms. High floret numbers and number of kernals per spike is controlled by genes located on chromosome 6P of Agropyron cristatum.
Plaque dedicated to Laure Gatet, in Boussac-Ville On January 15, 1946, a religious celebration in tribute to victims of the Resistance took place at the Saint- André cathedral in Bordeaux. Laure Gatet's name was mentioned in the liturgy. Major political figures attended the ceremony, but not her aunt who still lived in the city. On March 8, 1946, by the decision of General de Gaulle, Gatet was posthumously decorated with the 1939-1945 Croix de Guerre. She was then elevated to the rank of lieutenant by the War Minister, Paul Coste- Floret, on May 24, 1947. She was also named to the French Legion of Honour on November 10, 1955 by President René Coty, who also assigns her the French Resistance Medal. On June 16, 1953, Gatet officially received the status of "remote-resistant" from the Departmental of Veterans Affairs in Limoges, following the request of her mother made two years before. With this award honoring her daughter, Gatet's mother received a mandate of 60,000 francs.
While there is still debate about what Vitry did and did not compose, the first sixteen works here, all motets, are widely considered to be his.Adapted from Margaret Bent and Andrew Wathey, "Philippe de Vitry," Grove Music Online. Retrieved 4 January 2015. ;Works attributed to Vitry on strong historical evidence # Aman novi / Heu Fortuna / Heu me, tristis est anima mea # Cum statua / Hugo / Magister invidie # Douce playsence / Garison / Neuma quinti toni # Floret / Florens / Neuma # Garrit gallus / In nova fert / Neuma # Impudenter circuivi / Virtutibus / Contratenor / Tenor # O canenda / Rex quem / Contratenor / Rex regum # Petre clemens / Lugentium / Tenor # Tribum / Quoniam secta / Merito hec patimur # Tuba sacre fidei / In arboris / Virgo sum # Vos quid admiramini / Gratissima / Contratenor / Gaude gloriosa Note: The motet Phi millies / O creator / Iacet granum / Quam sufflabit and the ballade De terre en grec Gaulle appellee are securely attributed to Vitry, but no music for the latter survives, whilst the former survives only fragmentarily (see Zayaruznaya, 2018).
Warionia and Gundelia share a thistle-like appearance, anastomosing latex- ducts, floral heads that only contain disk florets, spurred anthers, and styles with branches and highest part of the scape covered with long hairs. Gundelia however is herbaceous, has monofloral primary flowerheads combined into groups of five to seven, the centre floret hermaphrodite, the marginal florets functionally male, and those groups combined in ovoid spiny florescences at the end of the stem, and spiny leaves, florets dull yellow to dull purple on the inside, purple to rusty on the outside. Warionia is a shrub, has many dandelion-yellow florets in each flowerhead, single or with two or three together at the end of the branches, the leaves dentate but not spiny. Scolymus is also a thistle-like herbaceaceous perennial with anastomosing latex-ducts, related to Gundelia, but it has many yellow, orange or white ligulate florets in each flowerhead, which are arranged with many in a spike-like inflorescence, or with a few at the end of the stems.

No results under this filter, show 267 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.