Rathe vs Raphe - What's the difference?
rathe | raphe |
(poetic) ripening or blooming early.
* Milton
(anatomy, botany) A ridge or seam on an organ, bodily tissue, or other structure, especially at the join between two halves or sections.
* 2003 , Joseph H. Kirkbride, Jr., Charles R. Gunn, Anna L. Weitzman, Fruits and Seeds of Genera in the Subfamily Faboideae (Fabaceae) ,
* 2004 , Arulkumaran, Essential of Obstetrics ,
* 2005 , Robert H. Anderson, Marco Pozzi, Suzie Hutchinson, Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome ,
* 2007 , Andrew M. Smith, James A. Callow, Biological Adhesives ,
As an adjective rathe
is ripening or blooming early.As an adverb rathe
is quickly.As a noun raphe is
a ridge or seam on an organ, bodily tissue, or other structure, especially at the join between two halves or sections.rathe
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl), from (etyl) .Adjective
(en adjective)- Bring the rathe primrose that forsaken dies.
Etymology 2
From (etyl), from (etyl) . See above.Derived terms
* ratherAnagrams
* (l), (l), (l), (l), (l), (l)raphe
English
Noun
(en-noun)page 24,
- The vast majority of the raphes' do not bifurcate (123 genera), but the ' raphes of 7 genera do.
page 28,
- They are inserted into the midline raphae' or the anococcygeal ' raphae and the coccyx.
page 29,
- It shows three symmetrical raphes (asterisk) radiating from the centre of the aortic root, but in fetuses there is often asymmetry between the raphes with the one between the left and noncoronary sinuses being larger than the others (red asterisk in Figure 2.14b).
page 87,
- The invariant occurrence of adhesive EPS at both the driving and the non-driving raphes' supports a model for constitutive, rather than induced, secretion of the ' raphe adhesive.