ramose
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin rāmōsus.
Adjective
ramose (comparative more ramose, superlative most ramose)
- Having branches; branching
- 1837. J. O. Westwood. "Art. VIII. Description of a new Genus of British parasitic Hymenopterous Insects." Magazine of Natural History, and Journal of Zoology, Botany, Mineralogy, Geology, and Meteorology. Longmans, page 258
- But it is chiefly in the interesting family Chalcídidæ that we find the greatest number of species having ramose antennæ.
- 1837. J. O. Westwood. "Art. VIII. Description of a new Genus of British parasitic Hymenopterous Insects." Magazine of Natural History, and Journal of Zoology, Botany, Mineralogy, Geology, and Meteorology. Longmans, page 258
Anagrams
- Eramos, Somera, ameros, seroma
Italian
Adjective
ramose f pl
- Feminine plural of adjective ramoso.
Anagrams
- Erasmo, saremo, somare
Latin
Adjective
rāmōse
- vocative masculine singular of rāmōsus