lentic Meaning in Tamil ( lentic வார்த்தையின் தமிழ் அர்த்தம்)
Adjective:
அமைதிநீர்,
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lentic's Usage Examples:
, above mentioned; and the " oak-spangles " of Neuroterus lenticularis, 9 Oliv.
Provision is made for gaseous interchange between the internal tissues and the external air after the formation of cork, by the development of lenticels.
quartz and felspar, which under ordinary conditions form more equidimensional crystals, would assume lenticular forms.
A lenticel appears to the naked eye as a rounded or elongated scar, often forming a distinct prominence on the surface of the organ.
E, epidermis; q, phellogen; 1, cells, and ~1, the pheliogen of the lenticel; k, cortical parenchyma, containing chlorophyll.
Halite may occur as a sublimate on lava, as at Vesuvius and some other volcanoes, where it is generally associated with potassium chloride; but its usual mode of occurrence is in bedded deposits, often lenticular, and sometimes of great thickness.
The spherical blanks soon gave place to lenticular-shaped ones.
Each such complex of cells underlying the lenticle of a compound eye is called an " ommatidium "; the entire mass of cells underlying a monomeniscous eye is an " ommataeum.
corner of the state) and lenticular hills, or drumlins, but having a general S.
It is lenticular in form, brightest near the sun, and shades off by imperceptible gradations, generally becoming invisible at a distance of 90° from the sun.
They are generally of lenticular form, and usually occur in or near the contact of eruptive rocks with schists or slates; the presence of the igneous rock being probably connected genetically with their origin.
Large ore-bodies of granular and compact magnetite occur as beds and lenticular masses in Archean gneiss and crystalline schists, in various parts of Norway, Sweden, Finland and the Urals; as also in the states of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Michigan, as well as in Canada.
d'Orbigny's name for a genus of Perforate Foraminifera, distinguished by the flattened, lenticular discoid shell of many turns, finely perforated; chambers subdivided by incomplete septa into squarish chamberlets.