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connate
connate, a. (ˈkɒneɪt) Also 9 conate. [ad. L. connāt-us born together, twin, pa. pple. of connāscī to be born together, f. con- together + nāscī to be born. (Walker, Smart, and other orthoepists have the stress coˈnnate; ˈconnate is in Craig 1847.)] 1. Born with a person; existing in a person or thin...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Connate
Connate may refer to
conjoined twins
connation, in botany
Connate fluids in geology
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Connate fluids
In geology and sedimentology, connate fluids are liquids that were trapped in the pores of sedimentary rocks as they were deposited. As rocks are buried, they undergo lithification and the connate fluids are usually expelled.
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connative
† coˈnnative, a. Obs. [f. L. connāt-us connate + -ive, associated with native.] = connate 1. (In first quot. app. subst. ‘fellow-native’.)1616 Sylvester Tobacco Battered Wks. (1621) 1130 Yet th' Heathen have with th'Ill som Good withall; Sith Their connative 'tis con-naturall. 1649 Bulwer Pathomyot....
Oxford English Dictionary
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coadnate
coadnate, a. Bot. (kəʊˈædneɪt) [f. co- + adnate.] = connate.1866 Treas. Bot., Coadnate, the same as Connate. 1882 Syd. Soc. Lex., Coadnate, the same as Adnate. Coadnate Leaves, leaves consisting of leaflets united at the base.
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Tinissa connata
Etymology
The specific name is derived from the Latin connatus (meaning connate) and refers to the fusion of the juxta and valva.
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connation
connation (kəˈneɪʃən) [f. L. connāt-us connate: see -ation; cf. separate, separation, etc.] † 1. ‘Connection by birth; natural union’ (Webster 1864). Obs.—01846 in Worcester (who cites More.) 2. Connate condition; congenital union of parts normally distinct: see connate 4.1854 Owen in Circ. Sc. (c. ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Synsepal
It is common among Lady's Slipper orchids (Cypripedioideae) that the two lateral sepals are connate to form a synsepal in the outer whorl.
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conatit
▪ I. † conate, conatit Obs. Her. [ad. med.L. conātus, f. L. cōnus, cone, apex] = coned.1486 Bk. St. Albans, Her. E iiij b, For if thes armys as it is sayd afore war contrari conatit [L. contraconata].▪ II. conate var. of connate.
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Clinanthus elwesii
Prominent characteristics include flowers with a corolla which consists of six connate tepals.
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Lithification
from the Ancient Greek word lithos meaning 'rock' and the Latin-derived suffix -ific) is the process in which sediments compact under pressure, expel connate
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Dudleya stolonifera
The petals are long and , fused (connate) . The petals are shaped elliptic, with outcurved, acute tips, and colored a bright yellow. in a Stylophyllum, instead of being connate like the flower in other similar Dudleya.
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Bulbophyllum sect. Ephippium
The lateral sepals are large and often elongated in front and occasionally connate at the apex. The petals are very different.
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Lagenandra
Helophytes, rarely rheophytes, with thick creeping rhizome; leaf blade simple, ovate to almost linear, fine venation transverse-reticulate; spathe tube with connate Cryptocoryne in having female flowers spirally arranged (pseudo-whorl in Lagenandra nairii, whorled in Lagenandra gomezii) and free; spathe tube "kettle" with connate
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Lepanthes kokonuko
Dorsal sepal 3-veined, slightly concave, 1.0– 1.3 × 0.3 cm, connate to the lateral sepals for 2 mm. Lateral sepals 2-veined, strongly revolute in natural position, 1.0 × 0.4 cm, connate for 6 mm.
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