Lexicographical Neighbors of Stratose
Literary usage of Stratose
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. British Fungus-flora: A Classified Text-book of Mycology by George Massee (1892)
"Tubes immersed in flesh of pileus, of various depths, hence not forming a
heterogeneous stratum, subcylindrical, not stratose ; corky; sessile. Poria. ..."
2. Synopsis of the British Basidiomycetes: A Descriptive Catalogue of the by Worthington George Smith (1908)
"Tubes stratose after the first year. Perennial, lasting for twenty years or more,
... T. somewhat long, single to s-stratose. Po. minute, ivory-brownish, ..."
3. Memoirs of the Torrey Botanical Club by Torrey Botanical Club (1899)
"It is rarely that the perianth-wall is 2-stratose so far as the middle. In most
cases the perianth-wall is of more than one layer of cells only in the lower ..."
4. Pamphlets on Forest Protection (1915)
"Tubes formed as in Polyporus, but often stratose: plants woody from the first,
sessile, ... Tubes not stratose, frequently maturing centrifugally, ..."
5. Report (1905)
"It is distinctly stratose in old specimens, and in this resembles a ... This stratose
form may become several millimeters thick, and the writer has seen ..."
6. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden by Missouri Botanical Garden (1879)
"Fructification thick, stratose, stony-hard throughout, ... in structure 1-5 O mm.
thick, stratose, composed 0 of alternating pale and darker S layers but ..."
7. Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science by Kansas Academy of Science (1896)
"Lamina above 2-4-stratose: calyptra ... 24 Leaf margins recurved ; walls of basal
cells sinuate x G. Pennsylvania Schw. 22 Only the margins 2-4-stratose; ..."
8. A Dictionary of Chemistry and the Allied Branches of Other Sciences by Henry Watts (1863)
"... but with lateral stratose extensions, and with tufts of cirrus spreading from
the summit. It indicates a great disturbance of the atmosphere, ..."