| 21. | Small green structures in other Verticordia, found at the edge of the hypanthium, are absent in this taxon.
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| 22. | The hypanthium is about long but the stamens, which give the flowers their colour, are up to long.
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| 23. | The outer edge of the flower cup ( the hypanthium ) and the sepals are densely covered with soft hairs.
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| 24. | The flowers are red, black and brown and the hypanthium is buried in the corky bark at flowering time.
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| 25. | The juvenile operculum is present; the calyptra is conical, acute or obtuse, shorter than and as wide as hypanthium.
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| 26. | Pomes, such as apples and pears, are also accessory fruits, with much of the fruit flesh derived from a hypanthium.
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| 27. | The flower's hypanthium is typically 3.5-5.5 mm long, and shaped like a narrow bell.
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| 28. | The calyx has a cylindrical hypanthium which is divided into three to six hair-like forms on each of the upper lobes.
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| 29. | The slender pedicels ( 1-3 mm ), rachis and hypanthium are villous and closely appressed, but hypanthium only abaxially.
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| 30. | The slender pedicels ( 1-3 mm ), rachis and hypanthium are villous and closely appressed, but hypanthium only abaxially.
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