stri-, strio- +

(Latin: furrow, furrowed; groove, grooved)

stria (s), striae (pl)
1. A narrow band-like structure, a general term for such longitudinal collections of nerve fibres in the brain.
2. A thin narrow groove or channel in the surface of something; such as, a decorative feature on a column.
3. A stripe, streak, or narrow band; for example, a band of nerve fibers or stretch marks seen in pregnancy striae gravidarum.
4. A series of parallel lines, or tiny grooves, on the surface of a crystal, indicative of the mode of growth.
striae gravidarum
Striae cutis distensae related to pregnancy.

Striae cutis distensae refers to bands of thin wrinkled skin, initially red but becoming purple and white, which occur commonly on the abdomen, buttocks, and thighs, at puberty and/or during and following pregnancy, and result from atrophy of the dermis and overextension of the skin.

striate
To mark something with parallel grooves, ridges, stripes, or narrow bands.
striation
1. A patterning or marking with parallel grooves or narrow bands.
2. The striped pattern of striated muscle, or any of the light and dark bands that make up this effect.
3. One of a number of parallel lines or scratches on the surface of a rock that were inscribed by rock fragments embedded in the base of a glacier as it moved across the rock.
striations
1. A series of parallel striae (grooves, furrows); such as in a muscle or a mineral.
2. Scratch marks, or grooves; such as, thos found on a rock surface that has experienced glacial abrasion.
striature
The manner in which grooves, or furrows, are disposed or arranged; striation.
striocerebellar
Concerning or affecting the corpus styriatum and the cerebellum.