Citations:radiculous

of or pertaining to a radicle (possibly also: a radix)

 * 1927, The Ohio Journal of Science, volumes 27-28, page 12:
 * Loosely cespitose, much branched, yellowish-green, one to one and one-half inches tall, more or less prostrate, radiculous below; scales ovate,
 * 1962, Blumea, volume 11, page 397:
 * Both of these specimens consist of radiculous secondary stems (easily distinguishable from primary stems by shape and size of the leaves) with up to 5 cm long and unbranched
 * 1964, Peter Arnold Florschütz, The Mosses of Suriname, volume 1, page 193:
 * Stems 3 — 5 cm long, often irregularly branched near apex, brownish-red radiculous below. Lower leaves small, linear-lanceolate, gradually increasing in size towards apex of stem ; upper leaves spreading, lanceolate,
 * 1993, W. W. Goon, The "radiculous" maxillary premolar: recognition, diagnosis, and case report of surgical extraction, in Nrthwestern Dentistry, 72, 31-33
 * 2008, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Secrets, page 320:
 * Radicular pain indicates that a radicle )nerve root) has been compressed; Radiculous pain is pain without anatomic basis.
 * 2008, Acta Botanica Hungarica, volume 50, page 160:
 * Plants gregarious, yellowish-green; branches arise from the main stem as lateral innovation or from the basal part of stem. Stem orange-brown, central strand not prominent, radiculous at base;
 * 2013, Issues in Dentistry, Oral Health, Odontology, and and Craniofacial Research, 2012 edition ISBN 1481646125:
 * A ‘radiculous’ first premolar was identified in two samples.