Lexicographical Neighbors of Furcately
Literary usage of Furcately
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Annals and Magazine of Natural History by William Jardine (1872)
"... flabellate, furcately divided; cells disposed on both surfaces back to back,
immersed, coalescent, parallel to the plane of the axis. ..."
2. Catalogue of Lithophytes Or Stony Corals in the Collection of the British Museum by John Edward Gray (1870)
"... Coral tree-like, generally furcately branched. The bark is granular, with a
more or less distinct lateral groove on each side of the stem. ..."
3. Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science edited by Biologists Limited, The Company of. (1868)
"... sometimes the antheridial cells are furcately branched ; or only one of them
is normally developed, whilst the other is either altogether wanting or is ..."
4. Ferns: British and Exotic by Edward Joseph Lowe (1868)
"... membranaceous, olive green in colour, elongated-ovate, pinnate below; the
pinnae sub vertical, alternate, decurrent, winged, and furcately pinnatifid; ..."
5. A Manual of the Infusoria: Including a Description of All Known Flagellate ...by William Saville Kent by William Saville Kent (1882)
"At 7 an animalcule isolated from its lorica, viewed in optical section, and
showing at m outer wreath of furcately branched cirrose cilia or ..."
6. The Treasury of Botany: A Popular Dictionary of the Vegetable Kingdom; with by John Lindley (1866)
"... a South American and "West Indian plant, with furcately-lobed fronds, is the
only species. ..."
7. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia by Royal Society of South Australia (1893)
"Wings slightly exceeding the abdomen, anterior radial vein much and furcately
branched towards the ..."