The female organ of the plant, which produces the seeds.
the seed producing part of a flower; often referred to as the female part of a flower.
(see: Parts of a Flower graphic.)
The female part of the flower consist-ing of style, stigma and ovary.
The female reproductive organs in a flower, including the stigma, style, and ovary. It is shaped (usually) like a long necked vase with a swollen base. Located at the center of the flower in the gynoecium, the pistil is comprised of leaf-like structures called carpels. See also complete flower.
The unit of the gynoecium composed of stigma, style and ovary.
The female part of a flower composed of ovary, style and stigma.
female part of the flower that includes the stigma, style, and ovary
made of five parts: the stigma, the style, the ovary, the ovules, the petals and the sepals.
Also called gynoecium. The female part a bloom. The pistil consists of the ovary, the stigma and the style.
The seed-bearing portion of a flower, composed of the ovary, stigma and style.
The female reproductive structure of a flower, consisting of stigma, style, and ovary.
the female part of the flower consisting of style, stigma and ovary pod - developed ovary or fruit.
female part of the flower where pollination occurs when the pollen is deposited against its tip (stigma).
the female structure in the flower.
The female reproductive organ, consisting of the stigma, style, and ovary. Plant growth. A permanent increase in volume, dry weight, or both
the part of the flower that receives pollen to make seeds
The collective name for the female parts of a flower. If the flower has just one carpel, then it has a simple pistil; if there is more than one carpel, then it has a compound pistil.
the central organ of a flower containing the macrosporanges (ovules).
Ovule-bearing organ of an angiosperm composed of ovary, style, and stigma.
The female reproductive organ of the flower, composed of a stigma, style, and ovary; sometimes called the carpel.
female structure of a flower, composed of the stigma, on which pollen grains germinate, and the style, through which the pollen tube grows to the ovule in the ovary.
the organ of a flower which bears ovules and later seeds.
n. (L. pistillum, pestle) the unit of female function of a flower, may be comprised of a single carpel or two or more carpels united.
the structure of the flower that contains a stigma, a style, and an ovary.
A flower's central organ that contains the stigma, style and ovary.
pistillum: pestle] • The female structure of an angiosperm flower, within which the ovules are borne. May consist of a single carpel, or of several carpels fused into a single structure. Usually differentiated into ovary, style, and stigma.
The seed producing part and female reproductive organ of a flower.
Pistil Pistill, n Pistilo The female sexual organ of a flowering plant, comprising the stigma, style and ovary.
the female organ of the flower, consisting of the ovary at the inner base of the flower, a slender hollow tube (style) extending from the ovary to a small round knob at the end (stigma), which becomes sticky to receive and retain pollen
The central organ of a flower containing the ovules. The female part of a flower.
The female part of a flower, which develops into seeds and fruit when fertilized. [KR
The female part of a flower, usually divided into a stigma, style and ovary.
a structure composed of one or more carpels
The ovule-bearing structure of a flower, consisting of a stigma, style, and ovary; the "female" part of a flower.
Female reproductive structure that consists of the stigma, style, and ovary. It is sometimes called the gynoecium.
Female flower parts: stigma, style, ovary. Also, the innermost floral whorl, or gynoecium.
Stigma, style and ovary (female sexual organs).
Female part of the flower consisting of the ovary, style (stem between ovary and stigma), and stigma (pollen receptor).
the organ composed of ovary, stigma and style.
The female reproductive organ. It has three parts, the ovary, a slender stalk (style), and a bulbed tip (stigma).
The ovule-bearing organ of a flower, consisting of stigma and ovary, usually with a style in between.
The female part of the flower,consisting of the ovary (seed pod), style and stigma.
The female part of a flower, which contains the ovaries and ovules.
one of the five main parts of the flower consisting of three parts, the stigma, the style and the carpel.
PIS-til The female reproductive structures and their coverings in a flower. 563
A single female reproductive "unit." The pistil typically has three recognizable regions: the stigma, the style, and the ovary.
collective term for ovary, style and stigma; the innermost structure in a complete flower
the seed-bearing part of a flower comprising the ovary, stigma and style.
the seed-producing, innermost portion of a flower.
the seed producing organ of a flower, composed of an ovary, and one or more styles and stigmas.
The ovule-producing part of the flower.
The female organ of a flower. The pistil normally consists of an ovary (in which the seed develops), a stigma, and a style.
Female reproductive structures in flowers, consisting of the stigma, style, and ovary. Also known as a carpel in some books. PICTURE 1 | PICTURE 2
The seed-bearing organ of the flower. It consists of the ovary which becomes the seed pod, and the style and stigma. (click here to see flower structure)
The female reproductive (seed-bearing) structure of a flower that receives the pollen. Flowers may have one to several pistils.
The seed-bearing organ of the flower. The pistil consists of an ovary, stigma, and style when present. .
The female flower organ, consisting of the seed-bearing ovary, stigma and style. See line drawing of flower parts
female reproductive organ of a flower, typically consisting of a stigma, style and ovary
Female part of a flower; also known as the carpel.
The seed-bearing organ of the flower, consisting of the ovary, stigma, and style when present
a free carpel or a group of fused carpels.
The female reproduction organ of a flower.
The female reproductive organ consisting of the ovary, style, and stigma.
The female reproductive organ in a flower made up of the stigma, style, and ovary.
Seed producing structure of a flower with ovary, style and stigma.
the female portion of the flower consisting of the ovary, stigma, and style.
female element of a flower, consisting of ovary, stigma, and often style.
the flower part that contains the ovules
One of the four basic parts of a flower, the central structure around which are arranged the stamens, the petals, and the sepals. The pistil is usually called the female reproductive organ of a flowering plant, although the actual reproductive structures are microscopic. The pistil has a bulbous base (the ovary) containing the ovules, which develop into seeds after fertilization of egg cell(s) in the ovule.
The ovule (seed) bearing organ of a flower (including, when complete, the ovary, style, and stigma).
seed-bearing organ of a female flower
the entire female section of the flower, including the eggs, ovary, style, and stigma.
( pìs´-tel)- The female flower part; consists of a stigma, style, and ovary.
The female organ of a flower consisting of ovary, style and stigma.
the female part of the flower, consisting of one or more carpels and enclosed ovules.
a single carpel or a group of fused carpels; the female parts of a flower composed of ovary, stigma, and style.
Female reproductive parts of flower.
The central set of organs in a flower; it is composed of one or more carpels. More info
The whole of the female reproductive system of the flower. The pistil is composed of the ovary, style, and stigma.