obvolvent

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Latin obvolvēns/obvolvō.

Pronunciation[edit]

Adjective[edit]

obvolvent (comparative more obvolvent, superlative most obvolvent)

  1. Curved downward or inward.
    • 1974 May, A. J. Hesse, “A NEW SOUTH AFRICAN REPRESENTATIVE OF THE SOUTH WEST AFRICAN GENUS NAMIBIMYDAS HESSE (DIPTERA: MYDAIDAE), WITH SOME ECOLOGICAL NOTES ON THE HABITS OF THE SPECIES”, in Annals of the South African Museum, volume 66:
      Hypopygium of ♂♂ remarkably and conspicuously large, in form of an oval, box-like structure, with tergite 9 and anal lobes constituting the lid, but the tergite itself immovably united on each side basally to sternite 9; latter sternite enormously developed and also as described for this species, boat-like, shell-like, keeled below, with a projecting process or prong on each side postero-dorsally, posteriorly vertically deeply incised (V-shaped), the upper angles or corners of the incision (or posterior angles of sides of sternite 9) prominent, rounded, or broadly projecting upwards under the apical part of posterior lateral lobes of lid-like tergite 9 (this latter condition described by me for the type-species gaerdesi (Hesse 1972: 162, fig. 6 right) as an obvolvent structure connected or fused to tergite 9 may probably not be united to tergite 9 at all, for it could not be seen as an unconnected structure in the old dried ♂ holotype)
    • 2007, DA La Rue, “A New Species of Pleocoma Leconte from California (Coleoptera: Scarabaeoidea: Pleocomidae)”, in The Coleopterists Bulletin, BioOne:
      [] Intervals weakly convex, deeply, rugose with coarse contiguous punctures; sutural costae raised, smooth, glabrous, very finely, sparsely punctate; humeral calla noticeably tumid, glabrous, anteriorly abruptly obvolvent [] Humeri glabrous, smooth, abruptly obvolvent
    • 2014, Method for Controlling Pests, Derong Ding, Jie Pang, Chao Han, US Patent application 20140242048A1
      Eggs mainly locate at the inside of leaf sheaths of the second and third segments near the ground of the corn plants of which the haulm is slimmer and the obvolvent of the leaf sheath is not tight, which can account for more than 80% of oviposition amount.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:obvolvent.

References[edit]

Latin[edit]

Verb[edit]

obvolvent

  1. third-person plural future active indicative of obvolvō