nautiform
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Ancient Greek ναυτικός (nautikós) + -iform.
Adjective
[edit]nautiform (comparative more nautiform, superlative most nautiform)
- Shaped like the hull of a ship.
- 1854, Bibliotheca sacra: a theological quarterly, page 807:
- On the island of the Tiber towered the mast-like obelisk of the huge nautiform temple of Aesculapius, whose serpent there deposited, had stayed the plague in the fifth century of Rome.
- 1988, Peng Lin, Mangrove Vegetation, page 58:
- […] nautiform, 15 cm long; male flowers small, mixing with bristle-shaped bractlets. Petals 3, similarly as calyx, smaller. Stamens 3, uniting to form a cylindrical structure; anthers basifixed, linear, 2-celled […]
- 2008, Zhengyi Wu, Peter H. Raven, Missouri Botanical Garden, Flora Reipublicae Popularis Sinicae, Missouri Botanical Garden Press, page 6:
- […] inner whorl nautiform, ca. 2.2 mm; synandrium with 9 anthers. Female flowers not seen. Infructescences borne on old stems, stout, carpophores stout, […]
References
[edit]- “nautiform”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.