punctate(d)
71punctation — ˌpəŋ(k)ˈtāshən noun ( s) Etymology: Medieval Latin punctatus (past participle of punctare to point, from Latin punctum) + English ion 1. : the action of making punctate, perforated …
72punc|tat|ed — «PUHNGK tay tihd», adjective. = punctate. (Cf. ↑punctate) …
73punc|til|i|o — «puhngk TIHL ee oh», noun, plural i|os. 1. a little point or detail, as of honor, conduct, or ceremony: »The knight observed every punctilio. The newcomers were not accustomed to give much regard to the punctilios of law, and consequently ran… …
74punc|tu|late — «PUHNGK chuh layt», adjective. marked with small points, dots, or depressions. ╂[< New Latin punctulatus < Latin punctulum (diminutive) < punctum point; see etym. under punctate (Cf. ↑punctate)] …
75pun|ty — «PUHN tee», noun, plural ties. an iron or steel rod used in glassmaking for handling the hot glass. ╂[< French pontil, or Italian pontello (diminutive) < punto point < Latin punctum; see etym. under punctate (Cf. ↑punctate)] …
76Bipunctate — Bi*punc tate, a. [Pref. bi + punctate.] Having two punctures, or spots. [1913 Webster] …
77Impunctate — Im*punc tate, a. Not punctate or dotted. [1913 Webster] …
78punctation — noun see punctate …
79Blindness — This article is about the visual condition. For other uses, see Blindness (disambiguation). Blindness Classification and external resources A white cane, the international symbol of blindness ICD …
80Cell nucleus — HeLa cells stained for the cell nucleus DNA with the Blue Hoechst dye. The central and rightmost cell are in interphase, thus their entire nuclei are labeled. On the left, a cell is going through mitosis and its DNA has condensed ready for… …