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appendaged造句
(1) The committee is a mere appendage of the council and has no power of its own. (2) He had a tattoo on every visible appendage. (3) The elephant's trunk is a unique form of appendage. (4) The organism has small leaf-like appendages. (5) He treats his wife as no more than a mere appendage. (6) The two appendages hanging from the insect's mouth are used to detect and taste food. (7) Mechanics will be needed to manufacture bionic appendages. (8) Often he upgrades old models with new appendages. (9) Constrictions in the face and various bodily appendages. (10) For a long time some of its parts - its mouth and its eating appendages - were classed as separate animals. (11) I dissected preserved larvae into their component appendages and painstakingly traced each detail. (12) Among the Apterygota the retention of at least some abdominal appendages is a general feature. (13) A small lodge house that used to be some sort of appendage of Burnage Court is currently for sale through Hamptons. (14) Its buildings were earmarked by the kind of architectural appendages that seemed solely designed for attractive brochure photography. (15) In soft-bodied insect larvae, where the appendages are reduced or absent, locomotion occurs through quite different physical mechanisms. (16) The report of the committee enunciated that whereas tribunals were not courts of law, neither were they appendages of government departments. (17) Bold blue cones surmount an extravagant collar of prickly blue bracts with filigree appendages. (18) A variable number of these appendages may become transformed into organs that are functional during post-embryonic life while the remainder disappear. (19) These fleshy appendages are used to detect and taste food amongst the weed and debris on the bottom of a river. (20) They are rigidly connected with the cuticle, having no membranous articulation and are therefore readily separable from cuticular appendages. (21) Anglerfish species new to Greenland include the peculiarly appendaged Linophryne bicornis, such as this specimen hauled up from a depth of 4, 685 feet (1, 428 meters) in 2009.