Anagrammen & Informatie over | Engels woord CERE
CERE
Aantal letters
4
Is palindroom
Nee
Zoek naar CERE in:
Wikipedia
(Nederlands) Wiktionary
(Nederlands) Wikipedia
(Engels) Wiktionary
(Engels) Google Answers
(Engels) Britannica
(Engels)
(Nederlands) Wiktionary
(Nederlands) Wikipedia
(Engels) Wiktionary
(Engels) Google Answers
(Engels) Britannica
(Engels)
Voorbeelden van het gebruik van CERE in een zin
- Juveniles and chicks are monomorphic, while adults are told apart by their cere colouring, and their behaviour.
- The cere turns a light yellow-green colour at around 70 days old, with juveniles molting into adult plumage at around 6 months old.
- They have dark brown plumage with chestnut shoulders, wing linings, and thighs, white on the base and tip of the tail, long, yellow legs, and a yellow cere.
- This was a piece of heavy linen treated with wax (cera, from which "cere" is derived, is the Latin word for "wax") to protect the altar linens from the dampness of a stone altar, and also to prevent the altar from being stained by any wine that may be spilled.
- The bare parts of adult bateleurs are exceptionally conspicuous, with the adult cere, bare facial skin and feet all being rather bright red, however in some they can also temporarily fade to pink, pale pink or yellowish at times, such as when they are perching in the shade or bathing.
- It has conspicuous crimson bill ornaments—a round red knob with bony core adorns the maxilla base, while the cere extends apically at least halfway under this knob and below the mandible base forms a small fleshy wattle.
- It is the only Crax curassow where the male and female cannot be separated by plumage, as both are essentially black with a white crissum (the area around the cloaca), and have a yellow (eastern part of its range) or orange-red (western part of its range) cere.
- The cere and the legs are yellow in immatures and the plumage is generally browner, with the pale birds having untidier barring on the chest than the adult.
- It is also possible for the half-sider to be male on one side and female on the other (evidenced by a half blue, half brown cere) – an example of a bilateral gynandromorph.
Paginavoorbereiding duurde: 274,53 ms.