安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- Independent Living Service | ARIL | California Inland Empire
ARIL proudly serves adults with developmental disabilities who reside in San Bernardino and Riverside Counties We welcome individuals of all ethnicities, languages, and gender identities, as long as they are 18 years or older
- Aril - Wikipedia
An aril ( ˈærɪl ), also called arillus (plural arilli), is a specialized outgrowth from a seed that partly or completely covers the seed
- Aril | Definition Examples | Britannica
Aril, accessory covering of certain seeds that commonly develops from the seed stalk, found in both angiosperms and gymnosperms It is often a bright-colored fleshy envelope and serves to attract animals for seed dispersal Learn about arils and plants with these unusual seed structures
- ARIL Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of ARIL is an exterior covering or appendage of some seeds (as of the yew) that develops after fertilization as an outgrowth from the ovule stalk
- ARIL Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
ARIL definition: a usually fleshy appendage or covering of certain seeds, as of the bittersweet, Celastrus scandens, or the nutmeg See examples of aril used in a sentence
- What Are Arils? Definition, Examples, and Uses - ScienceInsights
An aril is a fleshy covering that grows around certain seeds, formed from the point where the seed attaches to its parent plant If you’ve ever eaten a pomegranate, you’ve eaten arils: those jewel-like, juice-filled sacs surrounding each tiny seed
- What does aril mean? - Definitions. net
An aril is a specialized outgrowth from a seed or fruit that typically covers or is attached to the seed It is often brightly colored to attract animals who will eat the fruit and subsequently help in the dispersal of the seeds
- Aril - definition of aril by The Free Dictionary
aril (ˈærɪl) or arillus n (Botany) an appendage on certain seeds, such as those of the yew and nutmeg, developed from or near the funicle of the ovule and often brightly coloured and fleshy [C18: from New Latin arillus, from Medieval Latin arilli raisins, pips of grapes]
|
|
|