foliate
61Bifoliate — Bi*fo li*ate, a. [Pref. bi + foliate.] (Bot.) Having two leaves; two leaved. [1913 Webster] …
62paginate — pag i*nate (p[a^]j [i^]*n[=a]t), v. t. To number the pages of (a book or manuscript). Syn: foliate. [WordNet 1.5] …
63Quinquefoliate — Quin que*fo li*ate, Quinquefoliated Quin que*fo li*a ted, a. [Quinque + foliate, ated: cf. F. quinqu[ e]foli[ e], L. quinquefolius.] (Bot.) Having five leaves or leaflets. Gray. [1913 Webster] …
64Quinquefoliated — Quinquefoliate Quin que*fo li*ate, Quinquefoliated Quin que*fo li*a ted, a. [Quinque + foliate, ated: cf. F. quinqu[ e]foli[ e], L. quinquefolius.] (Bot.) Having five leaves or leaflets. Gray. [1913 Webster] …
65Trifoliate — Tri*fo li*ate, Trifoliated Tri*fo li*a ted, a. [Tri + foliate. Cf. {Trefoil}.] (Bot.) Having three leaves or leaflets, as clover. See Illust. of {Shamrock}. [1913 Webster] …
66Trifoliated — Trifoliate Tri*fo li*ate, Trifoliated Tri*fo li*a ted, a. [Tri + foliate. Cf. {Trefoil}.] (Bot.) Having three leaves or leaflets, as clover. See Illust. of {Shamrock}. [1913 Webster] …
67Unifolliate — U ni*fol li*ate, a. [Uni + foliate.] (Bot.) Having only one leaf. [1913 Webster] …
68art nouveau — noun Usage: often capitalized A&N Etymology: French, literally, new art Date: 1908 a design style of late 19th century origin characterized especially by sinuous lines and foliate forms …
69perfoliate — adjective Etymology: New Latin perfoliata, an herb having leaves pierced by the stem, from Latin per through + foliata, feminine of foliatus foliate Date: 1687 having the basal part naturally united around the stem < a perfoliate leaf of a… …
70rocaille — noun Etymology: French, literally, stone debris, from Middle French roquailles, plural, rocky terrain, from roc rock, alteration of roche, from Vulgar Latin *rocca Date: 1856 1. a style of ornament developed in the 18th century and characterized… …