Sub-a.n.a.l plate: Orthoptera; = sub-genital lamina; q.v.
Sub-apical lobe: of male genitalia in Culicids is the inner sub-apical lobe of the side piece.
Sub-apterous: almost wingless; with rudimentary wings only.
Sub-clavate: somewhat thickened toward tip; but not quite club-shaped.
Sub-coriaceous: somewhat leathery.
Sub-cortical: beneath the bark; as in larval borings, etc.
Subcosta: (Comst.); that longitudinal vein extending parallel to the costa and reaching the outer margin before the apex; not branched as a rule of Packard, in Hymenoptera, = radius (Comst.).
Subcostal cell: in Diptera (Schiner), = marginal cell (Loew), = radial 1 (Comst.) in the plural (Comst.), all those cells anteriorly margined by the subcosta first s.c. cell in Hymenoptera (Pack.), = radial and first radial 1 (Comst.).
Subcostal crossveins: in Odonata, are between subcosta and media on the basal side of the first antecubital.
Subcostal fold or furrow: lies between costa and radius.
Subcostal nervule: Lepidoptera, on secondaries:= media 1 (Comst.): s.c. 1 = radius 1 (Comst.); s.c. 2:= radius 2 (Comst.) s.c. 3 = radius 3 (Comst) s.c. 4 = radius 4 (Comst.) s.c. 5 = radius 5 (Comst.).
Subcostal vein: in Diptera (Schiner), = 1st longitudinal vein (Meigen) radius 1 (Comst.): in Lepidoptera, runs from base, parallel to costa, to or beyond the middle, giving rise to branches which extend to the outer margin and thus = radius (Comst.).
Sub-cristate: with a moderately elevated ridge or keel on p.r.o.notum, in Orthoptera.
Subcutaneous: under the skin: applied to larvae that feed under the skin of animals or within the substance of a leaf.
Sub-dorsal: the s.p.a.ce between the dorsum and the stigmata.
Sub-dorsal line: in caterpillars is to the side of the dorsal and between it and the lateral or, if there is an addorsal line, between that and the lateral.
Sub-dorsal ridge: in slug caterpillars, extends longitudinally along the sub-dorsal row of abdominal tubercles.
Sub-equal: similar, but not quite equal in size, form or other characters.
Sub-eroded: wing margins when somewhat, but irregularly, indented.
Sub-falcate: when a wing is only a little excavated below the apex.
Subfamily: a division of cla.s.sification containing a group of closely allied genera; different from other allied groups, yet not so as to make a family series: opinionative, and ending in -inae.
Sub-fossorial: legs used in digging: yet not greatly modified.
Sub-frontal: close to the front; immediately behind the front margin.
Sub-fulcrum: a sclerite between mentum and palpiger: rarely present.
Sub-fusiform: somewhat spindle-shaped.
Subgalea: a maxillary sclerite or segment, attached to the stipes, and bearing the galea or outer lobe.
Sub-geniculate: applied to antennae that are articulated from a short, thick scope.
Subgenital lamina or plates: plates underlying the genital organs in Orthoptera.
Subgenus: a division within a genus, based upon a character not sufficient for generic separation; opinionative.
Subglossa: in Odonata; a sclerite between the two halves of the mentum (Graber): is really the true mentum.
Sub-imago: sometimes applied as = nymph: that stage in Ephemerida just after emergence from the pupa and before the final molt during flight: that stage in the development of insects with free pupa when the insect is fully colored but yet retains its pupal position.
Sub-labrum: =epipharynx; q.v.
Sublingual: beneath the tongue; applied to a pair of salivary glands in bees.
Submargin -al: an imaginary portion of a surface outside of the disk and within the margin: a line is submarginal when it is well within the margin but close to it.
Submarginal area: of secondaries, lies between the costal margin and the 1st strong vein.
Submarginal cells: in Hymenoptera (Norton) = radial cells (Comst.): in Diptera (Will.); = radial 3 (Comst.).
Submarginal nervure: in Hymenoptera (Nort.); the irregular line of veins extending on the whole parallel with the outer margin; composed in part of media 1, 2, 3 and 4, the medial cross vein and cubitus 1 (Comst.).
Submedian cells: in Hymenoptera (Pack.); 1st = cubital + cubital 1 (Comst.) 2d = medial 3 (Comst.); 3d = 2d medial 2 (Comst.).
Submedian vein: in Odonata, =cubitus (Comst.); in Lepidoptera, = 1st a.n.a.l (Comst.), runs from base of primaries to the hind angle, close to the inner margin and is v. 1 of the numerical series.
Submental: pertaining to the sub-mentum.
Submental peduncle: in Coleoptera, the prolonged portion of the gula supporting the mentum.
Submentum: the basal sclerite of the labium, by means of which it is attached to the head.
Subnodal sector: in Odonata, = radial sector (Comst.).
Sub-nymph: applied to the resting or pupal stage of female Coccidae; also to a supernumerary stage before the formation of the pupa, and thus = pseudo-pupa.
Sub-ocellate: an ocellate spot that is blind or without a pupil.
Sub-ocular: beneath or below the eyes.
Sub-oesophageal ganglion: situated in the head below the oesophagus, formed by a union of the posterior three primitive head ganglia.
Sub-order: a division of an order higher than a family, based on a character common to a large series of species; e.g. the h.o.m.optera and Heteroptera in the order of Hemiptera.
Sub-pedunculate: in Coleoptera, when the constriction between pro- and meso-thorax is so great as to give the appearance of a narrow waist.
Subreniform: a rounded spot or outline, below and sometimes attached to the reniform spot in Catocala and some allied Noctuids.