bracteate

listen to the pronunciation of bracteate
İngilizce - Türkçe
bürgül
brakteli
bract
çiçek yaprağı
bract
burgu
bract
{i} bürgü [(Botanik) ]
bract
{i} brakte [(Botanik) ]
bract
brakte
bract
taç yaprak
İngilizce - İngilizce
Made of thin, beaten metal (of coins, ornaments etc. with a hollow underside)
A bracteate coin or other object
Having bracts
{a} having loral leaves
{s} bracted, with bracts, having small leaf at the base of a flower stem (Botany)
{i} plate or other dish or coin ornamented with gold or silver
Having a bract or bracts
bract
A leaf or leaf-like structure from the axil of which a the stalk of a flower or an inflorescence arises
bract
a modified leaf or leaflike part just below and protecting an inflorescence
bract
leaf-like structure with a flower in its axil or, in COMPOSITAE - daisy family, in a whorl round flower head bracteole a secondary bract usually on the flower stalk or, in UMBELLIFERAE - fit weed family bract-like structure at the base of a secondary umbel bulbil small bulb found in leaf axils or amoung flowers
bract
Modified, usually small, leaflike structure often positioned beneath a flower or inflorescence. What are often taken to be the petals of flowers are sometimes bracts for example, the large, colourful bracts of poinsettias or the showy white or pink bracts of dogwood blossoms
bract
At the base of many flowers, just below where the petal connects with the stem is the bract Not all flowers have these modified leaves, but they are common and are usually smaller than the other leaves And, they are usually green, but may instead be conspicuous, imitating a petal --as they do in the poinsettia
bract
A modified leaf of the flower or the branch of a flower, i e glumes and lemmas
bract
A leaf, usually smaller than the true leaves of a plant, from the axil of which a flower stalk arises
bract
A modified leaf situated near a flower or inflorescence
bract
specialized scale-like leaf found at the base of a flower
bract
A modified leaf which is part of a flower
bract
a specialized leaf with a single flower or inflorescence growin in its axil
bract
Small leaf, particularly those at the base of flowers or pedicels
bract
A modified leaf or bud covering
bract
A modified leaf, forms beneath the flower (e g cornus 'flowers' are actally bracts surrounding the tiny, central flowers)
bract
Reduced or modified leaf, often associated with flowers
bract
A leaf or leaf-like structure from the axil of which a flower stalk arises
bract
{i} small leaf at the base of a flower stem (Botany)
bract
A small leaf found near the flower on the stem; it differs from the other leaves in shape and color
bract
a modified leaf that is part of a flower
bract
A reduced or modified leaf, often below a flower or flower cluster
bract
a modified leaf of an inflorescence or flower, often colored and usually mistaken for a petal: the typical case is the bougainvillea where the so-called flowers are indeed bracts
bract
A small, sometimes scale-like leaf, usually associated with flower clusters
bract
Any reduced leaf-like structure associated with a cone or flower
bract
A more or less modified leaf just below a flower or the flowering part of a plant
bract
A modified leaf in whose axil a flower arises
bract
A more or less modified leaf subtending a flower or belonging to an inflorescence In section Pseudothymbra the bracts are larger and noticably different from the leaves bracteole A secondary bract, as one upon the pedical of a flower
bract
Similar to a very small leaf and often scale-like, situated below some flowers or flowerheads or on some stems such as orchids
bract
A modified leaf from the axil of which a flower or flower cluster arises
bract
a modified leaf reduced to a scale often having a flower in its axil
bract
Any modified leaf, or scale, on a flower stalk or at the base of a flower
bract
A leaf-like structure associated with flowers and fruits [To return to previous page, click your browser's BACK button then scroll through the page to your last location]
bract
A modified leaf or a reduced leaf of a flower cluster
bracteate

    Heceleme

    brac·te·ate

    Telaffuz

    Etimoloji

    [ 'brakt ] (noun.) 1770. From Latin bracteātus (“gold-plated", "golden”), from bractea (“gold leaf", "veneer", "glitter”).