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Definition of Rimosely
1. adv. In a rimose manner.
Definition of Rimosely
1. Adverb. In a rimose manner. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Rimosely
1. rimose [adv] - See also: rimose
Lexicographical Neighbors of Rimosely
Literary usage of Rimosely
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Guide to Sowerby's Models of British Fungi in the Department of Botany by Worthington George Smith (1908)
"... when young slightly silky with white fibrils, at length rimosely incised and
torn into fibrils ; flesh same colour; gills adnate, ventricose, broad, ..."
2. Hymenomycetes Britannici: British Fungi (Hymenomycetes) by John Stevenson (1886)
"broad, fragile, not very crowded, at first clay-white, then pale nmber^
fuscous-spotted in appearance. The vertex of the pileus at length becomes rimosely ..."
3. British Fungus-flora: A Classified Text-book of Mycology by George. Massee (1893)
"Pileus compact, rigid, obtuse, plano-convex, margin at first incurved, at length
depressed, 3 in. and more broad, even, becoming rimosely ..."
4. Synopsis of the British Basidiomycetes: A Descriptive Catalogue of the by Worthington George Smith (1908)
"... and rimosely incised, fuscous-cinereous, blotted, becoming pale, or deep umber
with whitish marg. St. equal, smooth, lustrous, grey-whitish. ..."
5. American Boletes by William A. Murrill (1914)
"... surface white or whitish, subglabrous, rimosely areolate, the areolae unequal
and appearing like frustra of polygonal pyramids; context whitish, ..."
6. Mycologia Scotia: The Fungi of Scotland and Their Geographical Distribution by John Stevenson, Cryptogamic Society of Scotland (1879)
"... often rimosely incised, at length becoming yellow with a darker shade at the
dise, 2-3 inches broad, flesh white ; stem somewhat hollow, equal, curved, ..."
7. Documents of the Assembly of the State of New York by New York (State). Legislature. Assembly (1911)
"Bul 75, p.18 Pileus fleshy, firm, convex, fibrillose on the margin, rimosely
squamose in the center, ochraceous or ochraceous buff, flesh whitish or ..."