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axil
▪ I. axil Bot. (ˈæksɪl) [ad. L. axilla: see below; cf. mod.F. axille.] The upper angle between a leaf or petiole and the stem from which it springs; also that between a branch and the trunk.1794 Martyn Rousseau's Bot. v. 50 Branches which grow from their alæ or axils. 1872 H. Macmillan True Vine v. ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Recycle Metals: 5 Reasons It's Important | Axil-IS
Why Is It Important to Recycle Metals? 1. To preserve natural resources. Recycling metal replaces the need to produce virgin metal. In turn, this preserves precious natural resources like coal and iron ore used in metal production. It's essential to consider resources like coal, as its combustion is a top contributor to climate change.
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Axillary
nerve
Axillary process
Axillary sheath
Axillary space
Axillary tail
Axillary vein
Axillary (botany), of a flower or other structure found in a leaf axil
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axilla
‖ axilla (ækˈsɪlə) Pl. -æ. [L., = armpit; dim. of *axula, whence āla: cf. axle1. Common in late L. in form ascella.] 1. An armpit.1616 A. Read Body of Man 152 The backe part of the shoulder top, called axilla. 1877 Roberts Handbk. Med. I. 113 The eruption appears on the..borders of the axillæ. 2. = ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Rumex arifolius
The inconspicuous white flowers and seeds are carried on long clusters at the top of a stalk arising from the axil of leaves.
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Chromis atripectoralis
The black-axil chromis (Chromis atripectoralis), also known as the blackfin chromis or blue-green puller, is a damselfish from the tropical Indo-Pacific References
External links
Fishes of Australia : Chromis atripectoralis
black-axil chromis
Marine fish of Northern Australia
black-axil chromis
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Maschalocephalus
The genus name Maschalocephalus combines the Greek μασχάλη, maschalē ("axil") with κεφαλή, kephalē ("head").
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Why are plant buds called 'eyes'? I was reading the etymology of the Latinate English verb 'inoculate' which contains the following part that generated the question entitled above: > [...] _inoculare_ "graft in, impl...
You will see that each of them has two parts:
1) An "eyebrow" : this is a vestigial leaf
2) A small bud in the axil of that leaf
Thus, the two of them
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Ulmus macrocarpa var. glabra
Description
The tree is distinguished by a "leaf blade subelliptic, smooth, with tufted hairs in vein axil, base oblique, apex acuminate to narrowly acuminate
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Dendrobium toressae
A single cream-coloured to pale pink flower with a yellow labellum develops in a leaf axil. It is endemic to tropical North Queensland. A single cream-coloured to pale pink fower about long and wide develops in a leaf axil.
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Philodendron duckei
Flowers are borne in one spathe per leaf axil. Spathes are up to 8 cm long, with a spadix up to 8 cm long.
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Johnstonalia
The Latin specific epithet of axilliflora refers to axillary meaning borne in or arising from the axil (the junction of leaf and stem) and also 'flora'
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Cladonia furcata
The axil, the inner junction of a branchlet with a branch or with another branchlet, is open, with inrolled branches, and frequently with a longitudinal groove that extends down the podetium from the axil.
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Hakea invaginata
Each solitary axillary inflorescence has an umbelliform raceme and is grouped to form a long brush-like structure containing 60 to 80 flowers along the axil Following flowering one to six stalked fruits will form per axil.
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Philotheca pinoides
a small, erect undershrub with needle-shaped, glandular-warty leaves and pale pink or red flowers arranged singly or in groups of up to three in the axil The flowers are arranged singly or in groups of up to three in a leaf axil on the end of branchlets, each flower on a pedicel long.
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