abscises in English

verb
1
cut off or away.

Use "abscises" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "abscises" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "abscises", or refer to the context using the word "abscises" in the English Dictionary.

1. General (5 matching dictionaries) Abscises: Merriam-Webster.com [home, info] Abscises: Collins English Dictionary [home, info] Abscises: Wiktionary [home, info]

2. Abscises - find the meaning, anagrams and hook words with Abscises and much more

3. Abscises 12 is a valid Scrabble Word in NWL, formerly TWL (USA, Thailand, Canada) Abscises 12 is a valid Scrabble Word in CSW , formerly SOWPODS (Other Countries) Abscises 14 …

4. How to say “Abscises” in Chinese

5. Rasime Abscises taškų susikirtimo tiesės = su prabole = −

6. Abscises is playable in: Words With Friends 14

7. Abscises meaning Third-person singular simple present indicative form of abscise.

8. We found 8 dictionaries with English definitions that include the word Abscises: Click on the first link on a line below to go directly to a page where "Abscises" is defined

9. The word Abscises uses 8 letters: a, b, c, e, i, s, s, s

10. Dispersal begins when the fruit (and sometimes the enclosing calyx) Abscises from the mother plant

11. Synonyms for Abscises include amputates, removes, separates, severs, cleaves, cuts off, docks, lops off, truncates and curtails

12. For example, most of the potential acorn crop of white oak often Abscises prematurely (Table 4.5)

13. Agathis macrophylla first Abscises leaves and later the branches on which the leaves were borne (Addicott, 1991)

14. However, if the blade or lamina portion of a young leaf is cut, the debladed petiolar stump soon Abscises

15. Abscise (third-person singular simple present Abscises, present participle abscising, simple past and past participle abscised) (transitive) To cut off

16. When cycloheximide is sprayed on fruit attached to trees, enhanced levels of ethylene occur in the fruit and, subsequently, the fruit Abscises.

17. ESCRT-III recruits Vps4, an AAA-ATPase that Abscises the membrane during various cellular processes including autophagy and intraluminal vesicle formation

18. For example, Poinsettia shows little change after a 24 hour 1 ppm ethylene exposure, yet Cuphea hyssopifolia Abscises all flowers after a 24 hour 0.01 ppm exposure

19. Abrachia abradant abraders abrading abrasion abrasive abreacts abridged abridger abridges abrogate Abrosias abrupter abruptly abscised abscises abscisin abscissa absconds abseiled absences absented absentee absenter absently absinthe absinths absolute …

20. The final step of abscission-related cell separation in floral organs of wild-type Arabidopsis thaliana, which only Abscises sepals, petals, and stamens, is controlled by INFLORESCENCE DEFICIENT IN ABSCISSION (IDA)

21. Abruptiones abruptness absampere absarokite abscam abscessed abscesses abscessing abscession abscessroot abscind abscise abscised abscises abscising abscisins absciss abscissa's abscissae abscissas abscisse abscissin abscissions absconce absconded abscondedly abscondence absconder absconders absconds abscoulomb

22. Numerous lanceolate leaves with basally connate, lanceolate stipules, scale leaves with stipule lobes, and scale leaves without stipule lobes form sequentially on the distal portion of the branch which eventually aborts and abscises.

23. (Lamiaceae): a review of the evidence Based on Figures 2 and 3, species one will always shrink in the space above its zero isoclines and N ([alpha] - [theta])/a will always be attracting around Abscises axis.

24. Abscise (third-person singular simple present Abscises, present participle abscising, simple past and past participle Abscised) (transitive) To cut off. [First attested in the early 17th century.] (intransitive, botany) To separate by means of abscission; to shed or drop off.

25. Abscise (third-person singular simple present abscises, present participle abscising, simple past and past participle Abscised) (transitive) To cut off. [First attested in the early 17th century.] (intransitive, botany) To separate by means of abscission; to shed or drop off.