monocot|monocots in English

noun

['mɑnəkɑt /'mɒnəkɒt]

(Informal) monocotyledons, plant which has one cotyledon, plant with one seed leaves (Botany)

Use "monocot|monocots" in a sentence

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

1. 3–16 in: Wilson, K.L. & Morrison, D.A.(eds.), Monocots: Systematics and Evolution.

2. Plants with one Cotyledon are referred to as monoCotyledonous or monocots

3. There are two kinds of seeds in the Angiosperms, monocots and dicots

4. Coleorhiza is a sheath-like structure connecting the Coleoptile to the primary root, defending the radicle in monocots while Coleoptile is a pointed protective sheath covering the emerging shoot in monocots

5. Coleorhiza is the undifferentiated sheath which encloses the radicle and root cap in a monocot seed

6. Coleoptile is a green coloured protective sheath, which covers the plumule in monocot plants

7. Her primary research interests were focused on monocots, and her work impacted the Ornithogalum and Agapanthus.

8. Monocot embryo has protective sheaths around plumule and radicle that are known as coleoptile and Coleorhiza …

9. Coleorhiza meaning and definition: – it is the sheath that covers the radicle in a monocot seed

10. Coleoptile is the protective sheath of a monocot seed, surrounding the plumule or the shoot tip

11. Coleorhiza is a protective sheath in the monocot seed that protects the root tip or the radicle

12. It is confined to Asparagales among the monocots and is believed to have evolved independently in most families.

13. Coleorhiza is a sheath-like structure connecting the coleoptile to the primary root, defending the radicle in monocots while coleoptile is a pointed protective sheath covering the emerging shoot in monocots. While Coleorhiza stays within the soil, coleoptile emerges out of the soil

14. Seeds in dicots are mainly ex-Albuminous or non-endospermic; whereas in monocots seeds are mostly Albuminous or endospermic

15. The Coleorhiza, coleorrhiza or root sheath is a layer of tissue that surrounds the root in the monocot seed.

16. The present inventions provide transgenic aloe plants and recombinant constructs for transforming aloe plants, aspects of which, may be applied to other monocots.

17. The family Hydatellaceae was placed among the monocots in previous systems, but a 2007 study found that the family belongs to the Nymphaeales.

18. 9 A plantlet had been obtained. Histological sections proved that the embryos had a typical histological structure of monocot somatic embryos.

19. 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

20. Hypernyms ("Bloodwort family" is a kind of): liliopsid family; monocot family (family of flowering plants having a single cotyledon (embryonic leaf) in the seed)

21. Coleoptile is the pointed protective sheath covering the emerging shoot in monocotyledons such as grasses in which few leaf primordia and shoot apex of monocot embryo remain enclosed

22. Although the Coleorhiza is involved in germination and successful establishment of all of the major monocot crop seeds, our knowledge of its morphology, anatomy, and function is very sparse.

23. • Anatomical studies of a scattering of Apocarpous paleodicots, monocots, and eudicots show that, after transiting the style, 'extra' pollen tubes exit fully fertilized carpels and grow to other carpels with unfertilized ovules.

24. Acorus Calamus (also called sweet flag or Calamus, among many common names) is a species of flowering plant, a tall wetland monocot of the family Acoraceae, in the genus Acorus.

25. Colicroot; unicorn root: Group: monocot: Family: Liliaceae: Growth type: forb/herb: Duration: annual: Origin: native: Plant height: 1 - 3' Foliage: Grasslike, of a yellowish green color, and from 2 to 6 inches long