The leaves, too, are quite glabrous and obscurely toothed.
2
Some parts of human skin, better known as glabrous skin, have a unique response to water.
3
The whole tree is quite glabrous except the petioles, which are clothed with a dense pubescence.
4
His foot slithered with the glabrous mess.
5
A glabrous tree, or shrub.
6
Black streaks from tears marred her eye paint, and the distant colored lights showed her flesh glabrous with sweat.
7
Unbriefed on the subject of the glabrous playwright and novelist, the president looked wildly about for his minister of culture.
8
He lay twitching in the yellow grass with his eyes turned up to glabrous whites that reflected the lurid sunset.
9
It is a tree of 25 feet in height, with nearly rotundate, glabrous leaves on long footstalks, and pretty pinky-white flowers.
10
It is very variable in character, and the form generally cultivated grows about 4 feet high, and has ovate-lanceolate, almost glabrous leaves.
11
In this study we investigate the impact of repeated exposure to stress on mast cell degranulation, in both hairy and glabrous skin.
12
The case of the Anthyllis will make a "tie" with the believed case of Pyrenees plants becoming glabrous at low levels.
13
Its surface may be smooth (glabrous), covered with scales (squamulose), rough (scabrous), dotted, lacerated, or be marked with a network of veins (reticulated).
14
Their faces were mere glabrous disks, from which eyes and nose had completely vanished; only the mouth remained, a toothless gap fringed with straggling hairs.
15
The Utapaun's glabrous scalp glistened with a sheen of moisture, and he walked with a staff that reminded Obi-Wan vaguely of Yoda's beloved gimer stick.
16
Glabrous; or the young shoots and foliage slightly silky; or sometimes pubescent, or hirsute, with procumbent ascending, or erect stems of one to three feet.