Lexicographical Neighbors of Caudation
Literary usage of Caudation
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Memoirs of the Torrey Botanical Club by Torrey Botanical Club (1906)
"Thin ; most leaves incurved-acuminate into a straight caudation ; radicals various,
large and long, broad and small, regular or lop-sided, ..."
2. The Retrospect of Practical Medicine and Surgery: Being a Half-yearly edited by William Braithwaite, James Braithwaite, Edmond Fauriel Trevelyan (1861)
"... live longer, and moke some attempt at caudation, but they are .still farther
removed in form from the typical cell of healthy tissues. ..."
3. The Retrospect of Medicine by William Braithwaite (1861)
"... live longer, and make some attempt at caudation, but they are still farther
removed in form from the typical cell of healthy tissues. ..."
4. The Entomologist's Record and Journal of Variation by James William Tutt, Malcolm Burr (1890)
"... in fair numbers but in the commonest forms, although occasionally I took a
magnificent female with a great increase of the caudation of the hindwings, ..."
5. The British and Foreign Medico-chirurgical Review, Or, Quarterly Journal of (1861)
"... live longer, and make some attempt at caudation, but they are still farther
removed in form from the typical cell of healthy tissues. ..."
6. A Natural History of the British Lepidoptera: A Text-book for Students and by James William Tutt (1906)
"... in 1900, observes that they were of ''quite usual forms, except that an
occasional $ was taken with a great increase of the caudation of the hindwings, ..."
7. The Florist and Pomologist: A Pictorial Monthly Magazine of Flowers, Fruits by Robert Hogg (1883)
"A marked feature of tho variation is the yellow colour of the small lobes near
the caudation when the fronds are mature (A in ..."