LEAVES: Simple, long petiolate, alternate, usually with an ovate lamina to 8 cm long, veins conspicuous underneath. ❋ Unknown (1999)
The leaves are petiolate, often cordate, with strongly marked reticulate veining (unusual for a monocotyledon), sometimes lobed, occasionally palmately compound. ❋ Unknown (1987)
The _leaf-blade_ is linear-lanceolate, flat, acuminate, narrowed towards the base which may be acute, subcordate or rarely even petiolate, glabrous or sparsely hairy above and glaucous beneath, 4 to 10 inches long and 1/4 to 1 inch broad. ❋ K. Rangachari (N/A)
No such thing as a petiolate leaf occurs in acrogens, all are attached by ❋ William Griffith (N/A)
Apocrita: = petiolate, q.v. Apodal: with single, simple tubercles instead of feet, in larvae; without feet = apodous. ❋ John. B. Smith (N/A)
The whole four leaves of this plant are petiolate, but one pair is perhaps always unequal, one occasionally abortive, I look upon this as a proof that the so-called stipulae of Stellatae are real leaves. ❋ William Griffith (N/A)
_Actæa spicata_, as observed by Fresenius, the petals were replaced by true petiolate, palminerved, lobed leaves, the stamens and pistils being abortive. ❋ Maxwell T. Masters (N/A)
The leaves are distantly arranged on the creeping stems, ½in. long, oval, roundly toothed and undulated, fleshy, somewhat glaucous and petiolate. ❋ John Wood (N/A)
Page view page image: petiolate, plane, scattered nearly circular, with it's margin cut with accute angular incissures of an inch in length and from six to 8 in number the accute angular points formed by which incissures are crenate, or cut ❋ Unknown (1904)
The leaves are petiolate, the footstalk small short and oppressed; ❋ Unknown (1904)
Leaves alternate, petiolate, rhomboid-oval or lanceolate, acuminate, 3-nerved, entire or slightly dentate, upper surface glabrous, lower surface covered with woolly hairs and powdery red glands. ❋ Jerome Beers Thomas (1891)
-- A small tree with leaves alternate, simple, entire, irregularly nerved or veined at the base, petiolate. ❋ Jerome Beers Thomas (1891)
-- A climbing shrub with cylindrical woody stem, with leaves simple, alternate, entire, petiolate, ovoid, broad at the base. ❋ Jerome Beers Thomas (1891)
The tobacco with petiolate leaves, * which is the yetl of the ancient Mexicans, is unknown. ❋ Unknown (1851)
Cataract River which in its appearance when divested of its folage, much resembles the white ash; the appearance of the wood and bark is also that of the ash. it's Stem is Simple branching and diffuse. the lief is petiolate, plane, scattered palmate lobate, divided by four deep Sinusus; the lobes are repand or terminate in from 3 to 5 accute angular points, while their margins are indented with irregular and ❋ Meriwether Lewis (1791)
The leaf is oval 4 and 3/4 inches in length, and 2 and a half in width. petiolate, the potiale Short only 3/8 of an inch in length cilindric with a Slight Channel on its upper Side where it is generally red; undevided, or entire, Slightly serrate, the apex termonateing in an accute point; the upper disk of a glossy deep Green, the under disk of ❋ Meriwether Lewis (1791)
The Choke Cherry has been in blume Since the 20th inst. it is a Simple branching ascending Stem. the Cortex Smooth and of a dark brown with a redish Cast. the leaf is scattered petiolate oval accute at it's apex finely Serated Smooth and of an ordinary green, from 21/2 to 3 inches in length and from 11/4 to 2 in width. the Peduncles cilindric and ❋ Meriwether Lewis (1791)
The leaves are petiolate, the footstalk Small Short and oppressed; acerose reather more than 1/2 ❋ Meriwether Lewis (1791)
* [[Leaves]]: Basal and lower cauline leaves long-petiolate, the blades up to 10 cm. ❋ Unknown (2010)
Leaves simple, alternate, rarely opposite or whorled, petiolate or subsessile; stipules often united to a sheath (ocrea). ❋ Mukul (2010)
[Jacy] [like to] have petiole ❋ Zeus610 (2017)