different between anther vs introrse
anther
English
Etymology
From French anthère, from Ancient Greek ??????? (anth?rós, “flowery, blooming”), from ????? (ánthos, “flower”).
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /?æn??/
Noun
anther (plural anthers)
- (botany) The pollen-bearing part of the stamen of a flower.
Translations
Anagrams
- Tehran, arthen, harten, nather, thenar
anther From the web:
- what anther contains
- what anther do
- what anther does
- what anther produce
- what is meant by anther
- what anther do in flower
- what antheridium meaning
- what antheridia meaning
introrse
English
Etymology
From Latin introrsus, introrsum (“toward the inside”, adverb), variant of introversus, from intr? + versus (“turned”).
Adjective
introrse (comparative more introrse, superlative most introrse)
- (botany) Facing or turned inwards or towards an axis.
- (botany) Said of anthers turned toward the center of the flower.
Coordinate terms
- extrorse
Translations
Anagrams
- insertor, snortier
Italian
Adjective
introrse
- feminine plural of introrso
Anagrams
- sterrino
- strinerò
introrse From the web:
- what is introrse means
- what does introrse mean in a sentence
- what is introrse anthers
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