Palmate vs Nonpalmate - What's the difference?
palmate | nonpalmate |
(chiefly, botany) Having three or more lobes or veins arising from a common point.
(botany) (leaves) Having more than three leaflets arising from a common point, often in the form of a fan.
* 1909 , Eleanor Stockhouse Atkinson, "", The How and Why Library .
(rare) Having webbed appendage; palmated.
(rare) Hand-like; shaped like a hand with extended fingers
(chemistry) A salt or ester of ricinoleic acid (formerly called palmic acid); a ricinoleate.
As adjectives the difference between palmate and nonpalmate
is that palmate is having three or more lobes or veins arising from a common point while nonpalmate is not palmate.As a noun palmate
is a salt or ester of ricinoleic acid (formerly called {{term|palmic acid|lang=en}}); a ricinoleate.palmate
English
Adjective
(-)- Although palmate leaves are typical of most Western maples, a number of species have leaves without lobes.
- The horse chestnut, buckeye and hickory trees have palmate leaves. That is, the broad oval leaflets are all set around the tip of a common leaf stem, spreading in a circle, like the ribs of a palm leaf fan.
- The Palmate Newt is a common Western European amphibian.