[permalink] [id link]
They have fleshy succulent stems that are major organs of photosynthesis.
from
Wikipedia
Some Related Sentences
They and have
They would have to go west through the narrow river valley that separated Leyte from Samar and hope that it didn't close in before they returned.
They were married over the week-end, though he was easily sixty and she could not have been even thirty.
They believe that if the South had been let alone it would have produced a civilization superior to that of modern America.
They are huge areas which have been swept by winds for so many centuries that there is no soil left, but only deep bare ridges fifty or sixty yards apart with ravines between them thirty or forty feet deep and the only thing that moves is a scuttling layer of sand.
They have indicated the direction but they have not been explicit enough, I believe, in pointing out Faulkner's independence, his questioning if not indeed challenging the Southern tradition.
They have an ancestry extending back, however, at least to 1728, when William Byrd described the Lubberlanders he encountered in the back country of Virginia and North Carolina.
They tell us, sir, that we are free, because we have in one hand a ballot, and in the other a stock certificate.
They were in fact quietly laughing at him, for their King wished to have nothing to do with the Western world.
On December 21, the day that the Irish House of Commons petitioned for removal of Sir Constantine Phipps, their Tory Lord Chancellor, Molesworth reportedly made this remark on the defense of Phipps by Convocation: `` They that have turned the world upside down, are come hither also ''.
They opposed the Forand bill, which would have placed the major burden of financial support upon the individual himself through compulsory payroll deduction ; ;
They and fleshy
They are relatively robust herbaceous perennials with short rhizomes and leaves forming a rosette, individually linear-oblong, flat, rather fleshy.
They are herbaceous perennials with bulbs, and can be identified by their rather fleshy leaves, usually large and attractive flowers, with six stamens and an inferior ovary.
They have flowers with ovaries that lie below the sepals and petals, often deeply sunken into a fleshy receptacle ( the part of the stem that flower parts grow from ).
They have a green-skinned, fleshy body that may be pear-shaped, egg-shaped, or spherical, and ripens after harvesting.
They are quite varied vegetatively and florally and are adapted to dry tropical woodland habitat and have quite fleshy leaves as a consequence.
They do not have a rhizome or pseudobulbs so species adapted to dry periods have fleshy succulent leaves instead.
They are distinguished from other gymnotiform fishes by the presence of a caudal fin ( all other families lack a caudal fin ) as well as a fleshy dorsal organ represented by a longitudinal strip along the dorsal midline.
They are tricky to transplant due to their coarse, fleshy root system and should be planted shallow and moved in early spring with a good soil ball.
They feed on grains, fruits, the fleshy petals of flowers ( Salmalia, Butea ) and sometimes raid agricultural fields and orchards.
They are characterized by their fleshy mucilaginous leaves arranged in a basal rosette and by the possession of poisonous substances ( bufodienolides and cardenolides ).
They are carnivores, equipped with swimming parapodia ( fleshy winglike flaps ), strong jaws and grasping tentacles, often with suckers resembling those of cephalopods.
They are carnivores, equipped with swimming parapoda ( fleshy, winglike outgrowths ), strong jaws and grasping tentacles, often with suckers resembling those of Cephalopods.
They are carnivores, equipped with swimming parapoda ( fleshy, winglike outgrowths ), strong jaws and grasping tentacles, often with suckers resembling those of cephalopods.
They are carnivorous, equipped with swimming parapoda ( fleshy, winglike outgrowths ), strong jaws and grasping tentacles, often with suckers resembling those of cephalopods.
They have short, ovoid, often densely clustered pseudobulbs along the rhizome, in which grows a single, or rarely two, apical, erect, fleshy, gray-green leaves.
They have relatively simple mouthparts, with long mandibles and fleshy palps, which resemble those of the more primitive true flies.
They grow to 10 – 60 cm tall, with a rosette of long, slender leaves 15 – 75 cm long and 0. 5 – 2 cm broad, growing from a thick, fleshy rhizome.
0.370 seconds.