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A Grammatical Dictionary of Botanical Latin

 
subinde (adv.), "a particle of time" (Lewis & Short); rarely subin (adv.):“after that, then, next, thereafter, immediately afterwards; thereupon, forthwith; presently; repeatedly, frequently, continually, from time to time” (Follett); cf. interdum (adv.), sometimes, occasionally, now and then;

1. immediately or shortly afterwards, thereupon, promptly; from then on; thereafter, after that;

– primo pileus candidus subinde rubrescens at first pileus white, promptly turning red.

- [Splachum luteum; moss] apophysis ante plenariam expansionem contracta rugosa, viridis expansa subinde in umbraculi formam, lutea (Hedw.), the apophysis before complete expansion contracted, rugose, when expanded green, shortly afterwards in the shape of an umbrella, yellow.

- folia e basi brevissima angusta ovali-acuminata, stricta, subinde acumine semitorta, concava (DozyMoek), the leaves from a very short base narrow, oval-acuminate, upright, thereupon semitwisted in the acumen.

- flos masculus foliis perigonialibus extimis maximis recurvis, ante explosionem breuioribus, subin longioribus (Hedw), the male flower with the outermost perigonial leaves the largest, recurved, shorter before the discharge, shortly afterwards longer.

2. at more or less frequent intervals of time, from time to time, now and then;

- axillae folii subinde gemmae longitudinis varii emittentes, the axils of the leaves from time to time gemmae of various lengths producing.

- planta subinde per gemmas filamentosas se regenerans, plant from time to time reproducing itself by filamentous gemmae.

- planta subinde stolones vel rhizoida fertilia efficiens prostremo flores fertiles, plant producing from time to time fertile stolons or rhizoids, in the end fertile flowers.

- differt a praecedente verrucis tenuibus, subinde elongatis, it differs from the preceding by the thin verrucae, from time to time elongate.

- flores in capitulo uniformes v. subinde steriles, flowers uniform in heads or frequently sterile.

3. in intervals of time, (“particularly, of repeated actions” (Lewis & Short): often, repeatedly, constantly, frequently, continually; note also iterum (adv.), ‘again, a second time;’

- cellulae prolongantur, subinde dividuntur, et tota frons increscit, the cells are prolonged, repeatedly divided and the whole frond increases.

- folium iterum vel subinde divisum, the leaf again or repeatedly divided.

- cellulae prolongantur, subinde dividuntur, et tota frons increscit, the cells are prolonged, repeatedly divided and the whole frond increases.

- [moss] planta epidendra corticem arborum et ramorum investiens, primo prorepens, dein vero caulium filiformium incremento longe subinde ab iisdem dependens (DozyMoek), plant epidendrous [i.e. growing on trees], covering the bark of trees and branches, at first creeping along, then with long repeated increment [of growth] of the filiform stems, dangling from the same [i.e. places].

- [mosses; peristome] interjecto ciliolo capillari, dentibus parum breviore, solido et ex unica cellularum serie vel subinde basi perforato ibidemque e duplici serie cellularum conflato TO DO (DozyMoek.), [with the capillary small cilia placed between [i.e. interjected], somewhat shorter than the teeth, solid and from a single row of cells or repeatedly [i.e. one after the other] at the base, perforated and in the same place, conflated [i.e. fused together] from a double row of cells.

 

A work in progress, presently with preliminary A through R, and S, and with S (in part) through Z essentially completed.
Copyright © P. M. Eckel 2010-2023

 
 
 
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