unstemmed

unstemmed

(ʌnˈstɛmd)
adj
1. unstopped
2. (Botany) (of tobacco leaves) having a stem intact
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Most of the repertory is transcribed using a transposed treble clef, no bar lines (except at the end of a song and for repetitions), and unstemmed note-heads: in fact, the majority of the sources make use of unmeasured notations.
Place your unstemmed, well-washed grapes on dryer trays.
because he is concerned about what an unstemmed tide of refugees will do to the nation's resources.
Imports of cigar leaf scrap tobacco grew by 158.4% in quantity in 2008 (16,159 tonnes) compared to 2007 (6,254 tonnes), while exports of unstemmed cigar binder tobacco doubled in quantity in 2008, totaling 485 tonnes.
A subject for further research: the influence of stemmed versus unstemmed martini glasses on the pouring of clear spirits.
The collection is noteworthy in terms of its variability, including stemmed, unstemmed and side-notched types, and ranging from lanceolate to leaf-shaped in outline (Fig.
As defined by Justice (1987), the Late Archaic Stemmed cluster includes the Karnak Unstemmed, Karnak Stemmed, and McWhinney Heavy Stemmed types.
Experts fear that if the slump is unstemmed, some clubs will fail.
In this article we have elected to use sets of unstemmed words, a word being any sequence of alphanumeric characters (ignoring case).
2.21 the c[double prime] and its supporting A[flat] are shown as unstemmed note-heads, but in Ex.
The "unstemmed industrial expansion, with its growing destruction of the environment and the inherent climatic changes, must be seen in its overall destructive context" (61); its ultimate result will be the globalization of the Calcutta syndrome.