The
arils and peel together had higher total phenolic, flavonoid and tannins content than did the
arils alone.
While Ser (0.22) had the lowest score in the
aril, it was Met (0.39) in the seed.
After, each fruit was weighed and later divided into its components (pericarp,
aril, and seed) to be weighed separately on a digital balance.
Lynda Resnick, who eats a bowl of pomegranate
arils every day for breakfast, told me, "We're doing God's work.
Yet by all accounts, he wanted to fight Calvo anyway and it was his brother and business manager Riath who convinced him it would be better to delay things, possibly until late
Aril or June.
The nutmeg pod, which has dropped to the ground, is cloaked in a red net or
aril. O nce removed, the
aril is dried and separated into "blades" at which point it is known by its commercial name: mace.
The diaspore consists of a brilliant black seed ([approximately] 13 x 8 x 6 mm), which is partially surrounded by a cup-like, red, fleshy, aril-like endocarp (van der Walt 1973; hereafter called an
aril).
The Taxaceae
aril is the fleshy part of the megasporophyll and the apex of the axillary shoot (Chamberlain, 1935; Coulter & Chamberlain, 1917; Florin, 1954; Wilde, 1944).
Like those movie monsters who, when dealt what surely should be mortal wounds, manage to revive themselves and jump out at the prematurely at ease, so too analogical reasoning in law --
ARIL as I shall call it -- is back again in apparent triumph after having been most recently attacked by Peter Westen(1) and Fred Schauer.(2)
ARIL's virtues were proclaimed recently by both Cass Sunstein(3) and Scott Brewer(4) in the pages of the Harvard Law Review.
flavicarpa is a specie that presents seeds involved by
aril and hard seed coat with a semi-permeable inner layer (Delanoy et al., 2006), which confers a combination of physical and physiological dormancy (Alexandre et al., 2004).
They said that the JKLF Chief was on hunger strike since 10th
Aril and was admitted to a hospital in a serious condition four days ago but they were informed about the same, today.
Yew contains a mixture of alkaloids known as taxine, diterpenes, lignans and resin, it is toxic in all parts except the
aril. It was used in mediaeval times to treat epilepsy and snake-bite but it is more potent than any European snake and anyone taking yew as a cure is at risk of dying.
Its spokesman,
Aril Arif Abd Razak said the programme, which offers a variety of local traditional dishes, was attracting not less than 200 visitors each night.