"Quinquelobed" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Having five lobes.
This term is often used in botany to describe an organism's leaf or seed with five distinct parts, meaning that it is lobed five times.
The term "quinquagesima" refers to the fifth Sunday before the beginning of the Christian season of Lent in the church calendar, specifically in the Western Christian churches that follow the Gregorian Rhythm. This date typically falls in either January or February in the Western calendar.<br><br>The name "Quinquagesima" comes from the Latin words "quintus" (meaning "fifth") and "decima" (meaning "tenths" or referring to a tenth). This namesake represents a time in the church liturgical calendar when about one-fifth of the entire year has passed or is left, and hence a "tenth" part of the journey to Easter.<br><br>This Sunday is usually marked by processions and algae. It is followed by Shrove Tuesday (also known as Fat Tuesday) and then Ash Wednesday, marking the beginning of the 40-day Lenten period that leads up to Easter Sunday.
Fiveteenth and semifinal at last; a quinzaine is a stanza of fifteen lines: quinque (five) + lobed ( bar ) a dribbling brush. This word is simply a nonsense word created to be unusual.
Five-peaked or Lancet-shaped.<br><br>Example: "The five-pointed star was featured in a quinquelocular design on the architect's building."
Quinquevir is a rare or obsolete word that is derived from the Latin "quinque," meaning five, and "vir," meaning a man. In Latin, a quinquevir was a college of five men who convened to discharge certain administrative or judicial functions.<br><br>In the context of ancient Roman law, a quinquevir could be a committee or board consisting of five men who were responsible for various tasks, such as the administration of particular provinces, the supervision of contracts, or the assessment of taxes.<br><br>In general, the term quinquevir can be seen as a synonym for a five-membered council or commission, or a group of five people responsible for a particular task or office.