English language

How to pronounce dicot in English?

Toggle Transcript
Type Words
Synonyms dicotyledon, exogen, magnoliopsid
Type of angiosperm, flowering plant
Has types acerola, barbados cherry, jiqui, malpighia glabra, malpighia obovata, surinam cherry, titi family, west indian cherry, cyrilla family, cyrilliaceae, family cyrilliaceae

Examples of dicot

dicot
Dicot leaf size speaks to annual precipitation and leaf margins speak to temperature.
From the sltrib.com
Few dicot shrubs with multiple branching and secondary growth species have been described.
From the en.wikipedia.org
This differs from the dicot stem that has a ring of vascular bundles and often none in the center.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Phylogenetic analysis, however, indicates that the monocots are a development from a dicot ancestor.
From the en.wikipedia.org
This herbaceous dicot belonging to Brassicaceae family is a plant closely related to the mustard plant.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The plant appears to have dicot-type leaves similar to the silk tree, and long monocot, parallel-veined leaves.
From the sacbee.com
Dicot plant families which include monocarpic species include Acanthaceae, Apocynaceae, Asteraceae, and Fabaceae.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Lawn grass is a dicot, or a single-bladed plant.
From the ocregister.com
Nevertheless, the majority of dicot species do form a monophyletic group, called the eudicots or tricolpates.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
  • Flowering plant with two cotyledons; the stem grows by deposit on its outside
  • The dicotyledons, also known as dicots, are a group of flowering plants whose seed typically has two embryonic leaves or cotyledons. There are around 199,350 species within this group. Flowering plants that are not dicotyledons are monocotyledons, typically having one embryonic leaf.
  • Dicot is a Japanese musical duo. The members, Shino and Kana, both grew up in Fukuoka Prefecture and met at Fukuoka Women's Junior College in 1997 as first-year students. ...
  • (dicots) One of the two main types of flowering plants; characterized by having two cotyledons, floral organs arranged in cycles of four or five, and leaves with reticulate veins; include trees (except conifers) and most ornamental and crop plants. PICTURE
  • (dicots) A term traditionally used to refer to flowering plants that have two embryonic seed leaves, or cotyledons. Recent molecular evidence indicates that dicots do not form a clade (see eudicots).
  • Plant having two cotyledons (first leaves to appear as the plant emerges from the seed) and broad, net-veined leaves usually associated with broadleaf plant species.
  • A member of the Division Anthophyta, Class Magnoliopsida. This class is characterized by having two cotyledons, a feature shared with most other seed plants.
  • (dicotyledon) a flowering plant that produces two seed leaves or cotyledons when it germinates. This includes most herbaceous plants, trees, and shrubs.
  • Angiosperm plant having two cotyledons.