different between lyrate vs pandurate

lyrate

English

Etymology

From New Latin lyr?tus, from lyra (lyre).

Adjective

lyrate (comparative more lyrate, superlative most lyrate)

  1. Shaped like a lyre.
    • 1969, Vladimir Nabokov, Ada or Ardor, Penguin 2011, p. 205:
      The passage of time could only enhance his tenderness for the creature he clasped, this adored creature, whose motion was now more supple, whose haunches had grown more lyrate, whose hair-ribbon he had undone.
  2. (botany, of leaves) Having a large terminal lobe and smaller rounded lobes toward its base.
    • 1976, T. G. Tutin, Flora Europaea, Volume 4: Plantaginaceae to Compositae (and Rubiaceae), page 72,
      Basal leaves simple, lyrate or pinnatifid; cauline leaves 1- to 2-pinnatifid, pinnatisect or simple.

Derived terms

  • lyrate Asiatic hard clam (Meretrix lyrata)
  • lyrate rockcress (Arabidopsis lyrata)
  • lyrate rocksnail (Leptoxis lirata,[sic] extinct)

Noun

lyrate (plural lyrates)

  1. A long curved feather found in a bird's tail.

Anagrams

  • Ratley, Tayler, elytra, raylet, realty, telary

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pandurate

English

Etymology

Latin pandura (a pandore).

Adjective

pandurate (comparative more pandurate, superlative most pandurate)

  1. (botany, of leaves) Having a shape reminiscent of a fiddle; obovate with a pair of sinuous indentations near the base.

Synonyms

  • panduriform

Derived terms

  • obpandurate

Related terms

  • lyrate

pandurate From the web:

  • what does pandurate mean
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