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  1. www.wikiwand.com › es › VexillumVexillum - Wikiwand

    El vexillum era una bandera empleada durante la Antigüedad clásica del Imperio romano. El término latino es un diminutivo de la palabra latina velum, «vela», lo que confirma las pruebas históricas de que las vexilla eran literalmente «velas pequeñas», es decir, estandartes semejantes a banderas. El vexillum se asemeja a las banderas modernas, aunque en su caso la tela se cubría ...

  2. The length of the shell attains 9.2 mm, its diameter 3 mm. The shell is variable both in sculpture and colouring, though not so in form. This species differs in the number of longitudinal ribs, some specimens having half as many again on the body whorl as have others. The rufous banding is also entirely absent in specimens dredged from any depth.

  3. Papilionaceous flower. Flower parts of a Chinese wisteria. It has a diadelphous stamen morphology (one stamen not fused with the remaining nine), which Linnaeus classed as the Diadelphia. Dissected flower parts of Sesbania bispinosa. Papilionaceous flowers (from Latin: papilion, a butterfly) are flowers with the characteristic irregular and ...

  4. Conus vexillum, common name the vexillum cone or the flag cone, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Conidae, the cone snails and their allies. [1] These snails are predatory and venomous. They are capable of "stinging" humans, therefore alive ones should be handled carefully or not at all.

  5. Vexillum album-caeruleum-album (Russice бело-сине-белый флаг) est insigne contra incursionem Russicam in Ucrainam anni 2022 resistendi et repugnandi. Historia [ recensere | fontem recensere ]

  6. Atrina vexillum: Siyentipikinhong Ngalan; Atrina vexillum (Born, 1778) Laing Ngalan; Atrina gouldii banksiana Iredale, 1939 Atrina nigrina Lamarck, 1819 Atrina nigra ...

  7. Description. The length of the shell varies between 13 mm and 22 mm. The shell is whitish, with a narrow chestnut or chocolate band, either continuous or interrupted by the ribs. The shell is more stumpy, usually smaller, less disposed to granulation than Vexillum exasperatum (Gmelin, 1791), and its single band, when not continuous, appears in ...