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capitulum
[kuh-pich-uh-luhm]
noun
plural
capitulaBiology.any globose or knoblike part, as a flower head or the head of a bone.
capitulum
/ əˈɪʊə /
noun
a racemose inflorescence in the form of a disc of sessile flowers, the youngest at the centre. It occurs in the daisy and related plants
anatomy zoology a headlike part, esp the enlarged knoblike terminal part of a long bone, antenna, etc
capitulum
plural
capitulaA small knob or head-shaped part, such as a protuberance of a bone or the tip of an insect's antenna.
An inflorescence consisting of a compact mass of small stalkless flowers, as in the English daisy. The yellow central portion of the capitulum of a daisy consists of disk flowers, while the outer white, petallike structures are actually ray flowers. The capitulum is the characteristic inflorescence of the composite family (Asteraceae) of flowering plants.
Word History and Origins
Origin of capitulum1
Word History and Origins
Origin of capitulum1
Example Sentences
But just how do the knobs—called capitula—attract ants?
Jerome, in fact, seems to have been the first to unambiguously use the term capitulum to refer to a numbered, titled segment of a text.
On the attachments of the Urodele rib to the vertebra and their homologies with the capitulum and tuberculum of the Amniote rib.
Disc, or Disk, the central part of the capitulum of composit�, surrounded by the ray.
The sterile bracts of the daisy occasionally produce capitula, and give rise to the hen-and-chickens daisy.
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