dicotyledonous in English

adjective

having two seed leaves (Botany)

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

1. Sunflower seeds are dicotyledonous and non-endospermic or ex-Albuminous

2. Castor seeds are exception as these are dicotyledonous and endospermic or Albuminous.

3. Monocotyledonous, dicotyledonous, and Acotyledonous plants, and these he subdivided into gentes or nations

4. Monocotyledonous, dicotyledonous, and Acotyledonous plants, and these he subdivided into gentes or nations

5. Flowering plants whose embryos have a single Cotyledon are grouped as monocots, or monoCotyledonous plants; embryos with two Cotyledons are grouped as dicots, or diCotyledonous plants

6. When a part of the embryo, generally the Coleorhizae in monocotyledonous plants or the radicle in dicotyledonous plants, protrudes from the seed coat, the process of germination is completed .

7. Natural fertilisers and artificial fertilisers, in particular fertilisers for monocotyledonous plants and dicotyledonous plants, as well as gymnosperms and angiosperms, NPK fertilisers, acetobacter, seaweed extracts, soil improving chemicals, manures

8. Natural manures and artificial manures,In particular fertilisers for monocotyledonous plants and dicotyledonous plants, as well as gymnosperms and angiosperms, NPK fertilisers, acetobacter, seaweed extracts (fertilisers), soil improving chemicals, manures

9. Casuarinaceae, the beefwood family of dicotyledonous flowering plants, with two genera (Casuarina, 30 species; Gymnostoma, 20 species) of trees and shrubs, many of which have a distinctly pinelike aspect when seen from afar

10. Casuarina definition is - any of a genus (Casuarina of the family Casuarinaceae) of dicotyledonous chiefly Australian trees which have whorls of scalelike leaves and jointed stems resembling horsetails and some of which yield a heavy hard wood.

11. ‘The four groupings are: seed-hair fibers, leaf fibers, Bast fibers, and miscellaneous fibers.’ ‘There was a clear deficiency of Bast fibre along the length of the mutant stem.’ ‘Bast fibers come from the phloem tissues of dicotyledonous plants.’

12. The second phase (to be differentiated in phase II and phase IIA) gave rise to at least two morphologically different flower types and two separate semophyletic lines of floral evolution (phase III and III A), in each of which the primary zoophily is almost always associated with the development of intrafloral semaphylls (petals) usually (at least in dicotyledonous groups) of androecial derivation.