Definition of Order Parietales

1. Noun. A large order of dicotyledonous plants of subclass Dilleniidae.


Lexicographical Neighbors of Order Parietales

order Nudibranchia
order Octopoda
order Odonata
order Oleales
order Ophioglossales
order Opiliones
order Opuntiales
order Orchidales
order Ornithischia
order Orthoptera
order Ostariophysi
order Ostracodermi
order Palmales
order Pandanales
order Papaverales
order Parietales (current term)
order Pectinibranchia
order Pediculati
order Pedipalpi
order Pelecaniformes
order Pelycosauria
order Perciformes
order Percomorphi
order Perissodactyla
order Peronosporales
order Pezizales
order Phalangida
order Phallales
order Phasmatodea

Literary usage of Order Parietales

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Flora of Pennsylvania by Thomas Conrad Porter (1903)
"Violaceae in Order PARIETALES. 210 Flowers regular : stamens neither united nor ... Cistaceae in Order PARIETALES. 210 Placentae axile or central. ..."

2. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1902)
"In the Supplement Charles L. Pollard continues the description of the families of the order Parietales. The Museums Journal, of Great Britain, ..."

3. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia for by American Philosophical Society (1914)
"The order Parietales includes thirty families together with over four thousand existing species, the largest families being the Gut- ti ferae (775), ..."

4. A College Text-book of Botany: Being an Enlargement of the Author's by George Francis Atkinson (1905)
"order Parietales, with seven families in the eastern United States. The St.-John's-wort (Hypericum) and the violets each represent a family. ..."

5. A College Text-book of Botany: Being an Enlargement of the Author's by George Francis Atkinson (1905)
"order Parietales, with seven families in the eastern United States. The St.-John's-wort (Hypericum) and the violets each represent a family. ..."

6. The American Naturalist by American Society of Naturalists, Essex Institute (1902)
"Within the order Parietales the placentae are parietal; " and the floral evolution," says Engler, " has already reached very complicated floral types. ..."

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