1. striated - Adjective
2. striated - Verb
of Striate
Marked with striaae, or fine grooves, or lines of color; showing narrow structural bands or lines; as, a striated crystal; striated muscular fiber.
Source: Webster's dictionaryDyar and Gunter, pp. 113–115 Cyclosilicates tend to be strong, with elongated, striated crystals. Source: Internet
It occurs as long, slender to thick prismatic and columnar crystals that are usually triangular in cross-section, often with curved striated faces. Source: Internet
Only in October, after most other flowering plants have released their seeds, do its brilliantly hued flowers develop; they range from a light pastel shade of lilac to a darker and more striated mauve.sfn The flowers possess a sweet, honey-like fragrance. Source: Internet
Organic acid matrices became the basis for engineering such organs and tissues as skin, bone, cartilage, tendon, muscle (striated, smooth and cardiac), small intestine, etc. Collagen, chitosan and alginate have a special place among biomatrix materials. Source: Internet
Spruce bark is round and dragon-scaled and hemlock is striated with marks from where Beaver — in one of their traditional Tlingit stories — drug his claws down the bark after he visited Porcupine’s house up in the tree. Source: Internet
My favorite rock in my possession is a large, ruddy, multi-clast rhyolitic stone roughly soldered at the diameter to its other half, a gray sedimentary stone whorled and striated like a seashell. Source: Internet