Lexicographical Neighbors of Prootics
Literary usage of Prootics
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1905)
"This tissue is attached to the prootics exactly as the bony shelf is, and possibly
the ossification of the shelf takes place in it. ..."
2. State Geological Survey of Kansas. [Reports] by Kansas Geological Survey (1902)
"The prootics have been correctly interpreted by Professor Hay as being the largest
of the otic bones. They are irregular in outline and extend from the ..."
3. The University Geological Survey of Kansas by Erasmus Haworth, Kansas Geological Survey (1900)
"They are small bones and do not separate the prootics from the basioccipital, as
mentioned above. The basioccipital is deeply concave, ..."
4. The Journal of Anatomy and Physiology by Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland (1877)
"Though the prootics do not develope the descending outgrowths so characteristic
of Teleostei, ... With the single exception of the prootics none ..."
5. Elements of the Comparative Anatomy of Vertebrates by Robert Wiedersheim, William Newton Parker (1897)
"... and prootics,—show a new and important modification as compared with those of
Fishes in the presence of an aperture, ..."