¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Laniaries
1. laniary [n] - See also: laniary
Lexicographical Neighbors of Laniaries
Literary usage of Laniaries
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Proceedings of the Royal Physical Society of Edinburgh by Royal Physical Society of Edinburgh (1894)
"... and thus corresponding to the mandibular internal dentary ossicles on which
I long ago showed that the laniaries of the lower jaw (except the anterior ..."
2. Monograph of the Fossil Mammalia of the Mesozoic Formations by Richard Owen (1871)
"18), the laniaries are approximate, or are separated at their base by only a ...
Whether, however, the laniaries, which " are kept well apart" in Moschus, ..."
3. A Monograph of the Fossil Reptilia of the Liassic Formations by Richard Owen, Palaeontographical Society (Great Britain) (1881)
"The next mandibular tooth is larger, less curved, and crosses the middle of the
interval between the third and fourth upper laniaries. The tooth (! ..."
4. Publication by Palaeontographical Society (Great Britain) (1870)
"In the left ramus of the mandible two of the large anterior laniaries are in
place; one, answering to the second in PI. XVII, 2', projects across the ..."
5. An Introduction to Entomology: Or Elements of the Natural History of Insects by William Kirby, William Spence (1826)
"The laniaries are those which have a conical shape, are often very acute, and in
general the longest of any; and in some insects, as the carnivorous ..."
6. The Geologist by Samuel Joseph Mackie (1861)
"... canines strong, moderately incurved, of oval transverse section, each with
two strong vertical ridges ; Pre-laniaries very high, number unknown ..."
7. Proceedings by Royal Physical Society of Edinburgh (1878)
"the posterior laniaries are present; but being imbedded in hard ironstone, the
surface of the bone is so injured as to render recognition of sutures a ..."