S. Mahunka szerk.: Folia Entomologica Hungarica 46/1. (Budapest, 1985)
1. entire 2. undulate 3. dentate 4. serrate 5. pinnatifid 6. barbed 7. ciliate 8. squamose 9. spiculate 10. spinose Plate VII. Margins of setiform organs (after HUTCHINSON and DALZIEL 1954) lineate" 1 " (PI. DC: 8): marked with longitudinally running lines lineolate 4 " (Pl. IX: 7): marked with longitudinally running very fine lines varying in length maculate (Pl. Di: 6): marked with spots or marks of irregular outline and of different sizes nasute (Pl. VIII: 8): having a broadly rounded extension obtuse (Pl. VIII: 4): having a blunt apex + These words are generally used in the sense of more or less straight sculpturing, combinations with the adverbs undulately, irregularly, confluently might also be appropriate in order to convey unambiguous meaning. ocellate (PI. DC: 5): marked with concentrical round spaces, each space resembling an eye palmate (Pl. IV: 29): having a broad central part and the margin divided into sections, like the palm of the hand pectinate (Pl. V: 1,4): unilaterally beset with hairs or bristles arranged so as to resemble a comb penicillate (Pl. IV: 27): furnished with long, fine hairs, resembling a painter' s brush pennate (Pl. V: 3): bilaterally densely fringed with long fine hairs, resembling a feather phylliform (Pl. I: 10): generally broad-based, apically tapering into a point, resembling an ordinary leaf pinnatifid (Pl. VII: 5): having a feather-shaped split outline