Collocations for “carpel

(noun) One of the individual female reproductive organs in a flower. A carpel is composed of an ovary, a style, and a stigma, although some flowers have carpels without a distinct style. In origin, carpels are leaves (megasporophylls) that have evolved to enclose the ovules. The term pistil is sometimes used to refer to a single carpel or to several carpels fused together.

Below are words that naturally pair with “carpel in English, drawn from Google Books Ngrams data. Collocations are words that habitually appear together — learning them helps you write and speak more naturally.

How to Use Collocations

  • Blue pills show words that come after “carpel” — e.g. “carpel .”.
  • Purple pills show words that come before “carpel” — e.g. “the carpel”.
  • Click any word to explore its own collocations and discover more natural pairings.
  • ESL tip: Collocations sound more natural than individually correct words — native speakers use these pairings instinctively.

Frequently Asked Questions

What words commonly follow "carpel"?

Words that frequently follow "carpel" include ., is, and, of, tunnel. These pairings are ranked by how often they appear together in published English text.

What words commonly come before "carpel"?

Words that frequently precede "carpel" include the, each, a, single, one. These are common word pairings found in real English writing.

What is a collocation in English?

A collocation is a pair or group of words that are habitually used together in natural language. For example, "make" collocates with "decision" (not "do a decision"). Learning collocations helps you write and speak more naturally.

How can I use "carpel" collocations in writing?

Use collocations to sound more natural. Instead of guessing what word follows "carpel", use common pairings like "carpel ." or "carpel is". These appear frequently in real English text.