Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Stigma" ¶ 7
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Stigma and botany
Stigma ( botany ) | Stigma, 2.
Amaryllis Stigma ( botany ) | stigmas and style
The gynoecium ( whether composed of a single carpel or multiple fused carpels ) is typically made up of an ovary, style, and Stigma ( botany ) | stigma in the center of the depicted flower.
simple: Stigma ( botany )

Stigma and ),
Stigma and discrimination can add to the suffering and disability associated with mental disorders ( or with being diagnosed or judged as having a mental disorder ), leading to various social movements attempting to increase understanding and challenge social exclusion.
* " Pandemonium " ( Kaze no Stigma ), an episode of Kaze no Stigma
* Stigma ( letter ), a ligature of the Greek letters sigma and tau: ϛ
* Stigma ( anatomy ), a small spot, mark, scar, or minute hole
* Stigma ( book ), a 1963 book written by Erving Goffman
* Stigma ( manga ), a Japanese manga story by Kazuya Minekura
* Stigma ( EMF album ), an album recorded by the band EMF in 1992
* Stigma ( Irish band ), formed 1992 in Dublin
* " Stigma " ( Star Trek: Enterprise ), a second-season episode of Star Trek: Enterprise
* Stigma ( film ), a 1972 film featuring Philip Michael Thomas
* Stigma ( wrestler ), a professional wrestler
As the use of Latin within black metal " had escalated " ( according to the Stigma Diabolicum re-release booklet ), the name was changed to Thorns in 1991.
Her other manga series include Wild Adapter, Shiritsu Araiso Koto Gakko Seitokai Shikkobu ( Araiso Private School Student Council Executive Committee ), and Stigma.

Stigma and flower
Stigma of a Crocus flower.

botany and ),
He was also an avid reader, interested in botany ( learning the Latin nomenclature of thousands of plants ), astrology, and Middle American prehistory.
Modern botany traces its roots back more than twenty three centuries, to the Father of Botany, Theophrastus ( c. 371 – 287 BC ), a student of Aristotle.
Other organisms previously included in the field of botany include bacteria, ( studied in bacteriology ), fungi, ( mycology ) including lichen-forming fungi ( lichenology ), non-chlorophyte algae ( phycology ) and viruses ( virology ).
However, attention is still given to these groups by botanists, and fungi ( including lichens ), and photosynthetic protists are usually covered in introductory botany courses.
* Cortex ( botany ), the outer portion of the stem or root of a plant
* Head ( botany ), a structure composed of numerous individual flowers
Other medical innovations first introduced by Muslim physicians include the discovery of the immune system, the use of animal testing, and the combination of medicine with other sciences ( including agriculture, botany, chemistry, and pharmacology ), the first drugstores in Baghdad ( 754 ), the distinction between medicine and pharmacy by the 12th century, and the discovery of at least 2, 000 medicinal and chemical substances.
There are ranks below species: in zoology, subspecies ( but see form or morph ); in botany, variety ( varietas ) and form ( forma ), etc.
** Node ( botany ), the place on a plant stem where a leaf is attached
* Volunteer ( botany ), a plant that is of a different type from the rest of the crop
* Series ( botany ), a taxonomic rank between genus and species
Other terms include " wortlore " ( botany ), " welkinfire " ( meteor ) and " nipperlings " ( forceps ).
In botany, a seed plant embryo is part of a seed, consisting of precursor tissues for the leaves, stem ( see hypocotyl ), and root ( see radicle ), as well as one or more cotyledons.
* The starting points, the time from which these codes are in effect ( retroactively ), vary from group to group. In botany the starting point will often be in 1753 ( the year Carl Linnaeus first published Species Plantarum ).
" ( botany ), plurals " sspp.
* Trunk ( botany ), a tree's central superstructure
* Sucker ( botany ), a term for a basal shoot that grows from the base of a tree or shrub
While a professor of botany at the University of Jena, he wrote < cite > Contributions to Phytogenesis </ cite > ( 1838 ), in which he stated that the different parts of the plant organism are composed of cells.
After the Franco-Prussian war ( 1870 – 1871 ), de Bary was appointed professor of botany at the University of Strasbourg, founder of the Jardin botanique de l ' Université de Strasbourg, and also elected to be the first rector ( president ) of the reorganized university.
The genus Rubus is a very complex one, particularly the blackberry / dewberry subgenus ( Rubus ), with polyploidy, hybridization, and facultative apomixis apparently all frequently occurring, making species classification of the great variation in the subgenus one of the grand challenges of systematic botany.
* Mast ( botany ), the edible seed and fruit produced by trees or shrubs that wildlife species will consume
* Sinus ( botany ), a space or indentation, usually on a leaf

botany and part
In botany, a fruit is a part of a flowering plant that derives from specific tissues of the flower, mainly one or more ovaries.
Presumably part of the draw was Kean's famous attention to historical accuracy ; in his productions, as Allardyce Nicoll notes, " even the botany was historically correct.
In botany, there are many ranks below species and although the name itself is written in three parts, a " connecting term " ( not part of the name ) is needed to show the rank.
A branch ( or, ) or tree branch ( sometimes referred to in botany as a ramus ) is a woody structural member connected to but not part of the central trunk of a tree ( or sometimes a shrub ).
He was the author of the appendices on botany ( in part ) and ornithology in Potter's History and Antiquities of Charnwood Forest ( 1842 ).
Pope Nicholas V set aside part of the Vatican grounds in 1447 for a garden of medicinal plants that were used to promote the teaching of botany, and this was a forerunner to the University gardens at Padua and Pisa established in the 1540s.
In botany, the radicle is the first part of a seedling ( a growing plant embryo ) to emerge from the seed during the process of germination.
* Limb, in botany, the border or upper spreading part of a sympetallous corolla, or of a petal or sepal
At least twenty-nine of his treatises have survived as part of the corpus Aristotelicum on a wide variety of subjects, including logic, physics, optics, metaphysics, ethics, rhetoric, politics, poetry, botany, and zoology.
In 1859 he was appointed physiological assistant to the Agricultural Academy of Tharandt ( now part of the Technical University of Dresden ) at Julius Adolph Stöckhardt ; and in 1862 he was called to be director of the Polytechnic at Chemnitz, but was almost immediately transferred to the Agricultural Academy at Poppelsdorf ( now part of the University of Bonn ), where he remained until 1867, when he was nominated professor of botany in the University of Freiburg.
* Pit ( botany ), a part of plant cell walls which allows the exchange of fluids
He was part of the pioneer class of undergraduates at Cornell University, graduating with a degree in botany.
A leaflet in botany is a leaf-like part of a compound leaf.
# in botany or zoology, forming nouns in the sense " a part of an animal or plant with a specified structure "
In terms of the floristic province system used by botany, the bulk of the region is the Rocky Mountain Floristic Region but a small southern portion is part of the California Floristic Province.
* Ear ( botany ), the top part of a grain plant, such as wheat
In botany the labellum ( or Lip ) is part of an orchid, Canna, or other less known flower that serves to attract insects that pollinate the flower, and acts as a landing platform for those insects.
William Allen was its first President, and the society quickly took premises at 17 Bloomsbury Square, London where a School of Pharmacy was established in which botany and materia medica were an important part of the students ’ curriculum.
The first section, including thirty pages of the work, is the part of most importance for botany in general.
* Column ( botany ) or gynostemium, a part of an orchid
However, it also appears on non-cutting surfaces, for example in botany where a toothed leaf margin or other plant part is described as being serrated.

0.266 seconds.