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List of synonyms from "rabidly" to synonyms from "rachis"


Discover all the synonyms available for the terms race course, raceme, racemose, races and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.

Definition of the day : « raceme »

  • As in cone : noun circular-shaped object with pointed end
Example sentences :
  • This form of inflorescence is known technically as a “raceme.”
  • Extract from : « Elements of Structural and Systematic Botany » by Douglas Houghton Campbell
  • Spike, an inflorescence like a raceme, only the flowers are sessile, 74.
  • Extract from : « The Elements of Botany » by Asa Gray
  • Now this plant produces several flowers on a raceme and many racemes during a season.
  • Extract from : « The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication, Volume II (of 2) » by Charles Darwin
  • The leaves of this plant are linear and channelled, and the drooping flowers form a raceme of from six to twelve blooms.
  • Extract from : « Field and Woodland Plants » by William S. Furneaux
  • In this specimen a raceme of small flowers was included within the enlarged pericarp of a species of Anchusa.
  • Extract from : « Vegetable Teratology » by Maxwell T. Masters
  • Diagram of a simple cyme in which the axis lengthens, so as to take the form of a raceme.
  • Extract from : « The Elements of Botany » by Asa Gray
  • Four large compound leaves, each consisting of five or seven leaflets, and a raceme of sixty-eight flowers, have Fig. 129.
  • Extract from : « Botany for Ladies » by Jane Loudon
  • Its raceme of white flowers and its black berries are also known to me; but alas, only in a garden.
  • Extract from : « The Call of the Wildflower » by Henry S. Salt
  • For, as a rule, the nearer the flower to the tip of the raceme in the pear, the shorter the stem on the fruit.
  • Extract from : « The Pears of New York » by U. P. Hedrick
  • A raceme of flowers, much longer than the leaves, arises from several of the nodes.
  • Extract from : « Field and Woodland Plants » by William S. Furneaux