Crossword-Solution: INDUSIUM 8 letters, 1 clue 🏆 scrabble score: 11

Dictionary

Word Word Type Definition
Indusium n. A collection of hairs united so as to form a sort of cup,
and inclosing the stigma of a flower.
Indusium n. The immediate covering of the fruit dots or sori in many
ferns, usually a very thin scale attached by the middle or side to a
veinlet.
Indusium n. A peculiar covering found in certain fungi.

We have 1 clue for the answer “INDUSIUM”

Clue Answers
membranous outgrowth on the undersurface of fern leaves that covers and protects the developing sporangia 1 answer
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Powerful blow
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Hint 1 meaning
To boil with a continued bubbling or heaving and rolling, with noise.
Hint 2 anagram
PALOLW
Hint 3 another clue
BATTER ___
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Sentences with INDUSIUM (5)

Bentham writes of this genus:--"The indusium is usually described as broadly two-lipped, without any distinct stigma.
More Letters of Charles Darwin Volume II Charles Darwin 2001
This led Darwin to publish a short note in the same journal, in which he describes the penetration of pollen-tubes into the viscid surface on the outside of the indusium.
More Letters of Charles Darwin Volume II Charles Darwin 2001
But some observations led me to suspect that nevertheless insect agency here comes into play; for I found by holding a camel-hair pencil parallel to the pistil, and moving it as if it were a bee going to suck the nectar, the straggling hairs of the brush opened the lip of the indusium, entered it, stirred up the pollen, and brought out some grains.
More Letters of Charles Darwin Volume II Charles Darwin 2001
Further, I find that at an early stage, when the flower first opens, a boat-shaped stigma lies at the bottom of the indusium, and further that this stigma, after the flower has some time expanded, grows very rapidly, when the plant is kept hot, and pushes out of the indusium a mass of pollen; and at same time two horns project at the corners of the indusium.
More Letters of Charles Darwin Volume II Charles Darwin 2001
Will you look to this? for if they be by the relative position of the parts (with indusium and stigma bent at right angles to style) [I am led to think] that an insect entering a flower could not fail to have [its] whole back (at the period when, as I have seen, a whole mass of pollen is pushed out) covered with pollen, which would almost certainly get rubbed on the two horns.
More Letters of Charles Darwin Volume II Charles Darwin 2001