We dissected the cauda epididymis and made longitudinal slices to release sperm.
From the nature.com
It is this innovative use of the cauda that is most distinctive in the stanza.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Vandergrift's Festa Italiana once again invites entries for its bagna cauda contest.
From the post-gazette.com
This sauce is also known as bagna cauda and is not for the faint-hearted.
From the nzherald.co.nz
Another presented cucumbers in miso bagna cauda with potato bits, olive caramel, ice plant and almonds in lavender sugar.
From the time.com
Bobby Flay also made an appearance and sampled yellowfin tuna crudo, octopus bagna cauda and the Kentucky bison burger.
From the courier-journal.com
Then you'll deliver your bagna cauda to the contest booth by noon Aug. 21 at the Fest, held in the town's Kennedy Park.
From the post-gazette.com
I opted to try crunchy uncooked cardoon and tender-cooked as antipasto, dipped in Italian garlic-butter-olive oil sauce, bagna cauda.
From the post-gazette.com
In the second example, it is readily seen that the poet uses a cross-rhymed octet frons with a five-line tail-rhymed cauda.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
Any taillike structure
The Cauda is a characteristic feature of songs in the Conductus style of a cappella music which flourished between the mid-12th and the mid-13th century. ...
The second section of a troubadour canso; in the cauda, a composer is free to create whatever internal structure seems appropriate to the poetry. ...
A narrow tail-like appendage. adj. caudate.
Latin = tail, adjective - caudate - having a tail.
The pointed end of the abdomen in aphids.
The posterior portion of the sulcus of a sagitta, sometimes separated from the ostium by a collum (more information).