a. Bot. and Zool. [ad. mod.L. stīpitātus, f. L. stīpit- STIPES: see -ATE2.] Having or furnished with a stipes or stipe; stalked.
1785. Martyn, Lett. Bot., xxvi. 381. Tragopogon or Goats-beard is known by its feathered stipitate down.
1818. T. Nuttall, Genera N. Amer. Plants, II. 73. Capsule siliquose, stipitate.
1837. P. Keith, Bot. Lex., 43. Of the Stipitate Fungi a great many are furnished with a sort of conical or flattened production surmounting the stipe, [called] the cap or pileus.
1845. Lindley, Sch. Bot., iv. (1858), 87. Pappus feathery, stipitate, or sessile.
1846. Dana, Zooph. (1848), 157. Coralla stipitate.
1866. Treas. Bot., 1101/1. Stipitate, elevated on a stalk which is neither a petiole nor a peduncle; as, for example, some kinds of carpels.
1870. Hooker, Stud. Flora, 363. Iris sepals large, stipitate, reflexed, stipes channelled; petals smaller, suberect stipitate, margins of stipes involute.
1882. H. J. Carter, in Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist., Ser. V. IX. 283. Fibularia ramosa. Stipitate, subcylindrical, solid, [etc.].
Also † Stipitated a. Obs. (in the same sense).
1822. J. Parkinson, Outl. Oryctol., 41. Sessile calixTurbinated, stipitated.