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nervure

[ nur-vyoor ]

noun

  1. Botany, Zoology. a vein, as of a leaf or the wing of an insect.


nervure

/ ˈnɜːvjʊə /

noun

  1. entomol any of the stiff chitinous rods that form the supporting framework of an insect's wing; vein
  2. botany any of the veins or ribs of a leaf
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Word History and Origins

Origin of nervure1

1810–20; < French: rib. See nerve, -ure
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Word History and Origins

Origin of nervure1

C19: from French; see nerve , -ure
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Example Sentences

Then comes the radial—usually the most important nervure of the wing—typically with five branches, and the median with four.

Net′ty, like a net; Net′-veined, in entomology, having a great number of veins or nervures like a network on the surface, as in the wings of many Orthoptera; Net′-winged, having net-veined wings.—n.

They are generally preserved in such fair condition that the course of the nervures and the color patterns of the wings can be determined, and even, in one case, the scales may be studied.

It is not a voice that the crickets utter, but a regular vibration of musical chords, produced by nibbing the nervures of the elytra against a sort of network intended to produce the vibrations.

The wings are expansions of the sides of the second and third sections of the thorax, and are strengthened by narrow thickenings called 'nervures'.

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