Glossary
Adapted from Plant Identification Terminology by
James G. Harris and Melinda Woolf Harris.
A B C D E
F G H I J
K L M N O
P Q R S T
U V W X Z
A
- Acaulescent: stemless
- Accumbent: a term referring to seeds in which
the embryonic root is wrapped around and lies along the edges of the
two cotylodons (compare incumbent)
- Acerose: needle-shaped
- Achene: a small, dry, one-seeded, indehiscent
fruit (i.e. one that does not split open), deriving from a
one-chambered ovary, typical of the Asteraceae
- Acicular: needle-shaped, as applied to some
kinds of foliage
- Actinomorphic: radially symmetrical
- Aculeate: pointed or prickly
- Acuminate: tapering gradually to a pointed apex
with more or less concave sides along the tip
- Acuminose: rather
less gradual than acuminate
- Acute: tapering to a sharp-pointed apex with
more or less straight sides along the tip
- Acyclic: with the floral parts arranged
spirally rather than in whorls
- Adenophorous: gland-bearing
- Adherent: two or more organs appearing to be
fused but actually separable
- Adnate: grown together, used only to describe
unlike parts (compare connate)
- Adpressed: closely pressed together but not
united
- Aduncate: hooked
- Adventitious: occurring in unusual or
unexpected locations such as roots on aerial stems or buds on leaves.
Also meaning: out of the usual place, introduced but not yet
naturalized
- Adventive: see adventitious
- Aequilateral: equal-sided, as opposed to
oblique
- Aestivate: to become dormant in summer
- Aggregate: densely clustered
- Aianthous: flowering constantly
- Alate: having wings or wing-like structures
- Alkaline: soils that contain high amounts of
various salts of potassium and/or sodium, as well as other soluble
minerals, and are basic rather than acidic with a Ph greater than 7.0
- Allelopathy: a characteristic of some plants
according to which chemical compounds are produced that inhibit the
growth of other plants in the immediate vicinity
- Allopatric: occupying different geographic
regions
- Alternate: a leaf arrangement along the axis in
which the leaves are not opposite to each other or whorled
- Ammophilous: sand-loving
- Amplexicaul: describing a sessile leaf that has
its base completely surrounding the stem
- Anandrous: without stamens
- Ananthous: without flowers
- Ancipital: two-edged, such as the winged stem
of Sisyrinchium
- Androecium: a collective term for the stamens
of a flower (compare gynoecium)
- Androgynous: having staminate and pistillate
flowers in the same inflorescence
- Anemophilous: wind-pollinated
- Angled: sided, as in the shape of stems or
fruits
- Angular: having sharp angles or corners,
generally used in reference to structures such as stems to contrast
them with rounded stems
- Annual: a plant that completes its life cycle
from the its germination as a seed to the production of new seeds in a
single year and then dies
- Annular: in the form of a ring
- Anterior: on the front side away from the axis
- Anther: the pollen-bearing portion of a stamen
- Anthesis: time during which the flower is open
- Antrorse: pointing forward or upward (compare retrorse)
- Aperturate: with one or more openings or
apertures
- Apetalous: lacking petals
- Apex: the tip of a plant part
- Aphyllous: without leaves
- Apiculate: ending in an abrupt slender tip
which is not stiff
- Applanate: flattened
- Appressed: lying flat against or nearly
parallel to, as leaves on a stem or hairs on a leaf
- Arborescent: approaching the size and habit of
a tree
- Arcuate: arching or curved like a bow
- Areole: a raised area on a cactus from which
spines develop
- Aristate: with an awn or stiff bristle,
typically at the apex
- Armed: provided with prickles, spines or thorns
- Ascending: growing obliquely upward
- Asperous: rough to the touch
- Asteraceae: sunflower family
- Asymmetrical: not divided into like and/or
equal parts
- Attenuate: gradually narrowing to a tip or base
- Auricle: a small earlike lobe or appendage
- Auriculate: having earlike appendages
- Austral: southern (compare boreal)
- Autophilous: self-pollinated
- Awn: a slender, stiff terminal bristle attached
at its base to another structure or organ such as a leaf or grass stem
- Axil: the upper angle formed between two
structures or organs, such as a leaf and the stem from which it grows
- Axillary: borne or carried in the axil
- Axis: the main stem
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B
- Baccate: like a berry, having berries
- Balsamiferous: sticky and aromatic, like balsam
- Banner: the upper petal of a pea flower
- Barbed: with a backward-facing tip
- Basal: at or near the base, often describing
leaves and where they attach
- Basifixed: attached by the base (compare dorsifixed,
versatile)
- Beak: a firm, pointed terminal appendage
- Berry: a fleshy, indehiscent fruit in which the
seeds are not encased in a stone and are typically more than one
- Biennial: a plant that takes two years to
complete its life cycle, usually growing vegetation in the first year
and producing flowers and seeds in the second, then dying
- Bifarious: in two vertical rows
- Bifid: two-lobed or two-cleft
- Biflorous: flowering in the spring and again in
the autumn
- Bifurcate: divided into two forks or branches
- Bilabiate: two-lipped
- Bipinnate: twice pinnately compound
- Bipinnatifid: two times pinnately cleft
- Bisexual: having both stamens and pistils
- Bladdery: thin-walled and inflated
- Blade: the expanded terminal portion of a leaf,
petal or other structure, i.e. that portion of the leaf that does not
include the stalk
- Bloom: a white, powderlike coating sometimes
found on a leaf or stem surface
- Bole: the trunk or stem of a tree
- Boreal: northern (compare austral)
- Brackish: a mixture of salt and fresh water,
somewhat saline
- Bract: a modified leaf which may be reduced in
size or different in other characteristics from the foliage leaves and
which usually subtends a flower or an inflorescence
- Brassicaceae: mustard family
- Bristle: a stiff hair, usually erect or curving
away from its attachment point
- Brunescent: brownish
- Bud: a developing leaf, stem or flower
- Bulb: an underground plant part derived from a
shoot that is enclosed in numerous overlapping thickened leafy scales
whose purpose is to store food
- Bulblet: a small bulb produced at the base of a
bulb
- Bullate: blistered or puckered
- Bundle scar: scar left on a twig by the
vascular bundles when a leaf falls
- Bur: a prickly or spiny seed or fruit
- Burl: a woody swelling where the stem joins the
roots
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C
- Caerulescent: bluish
- Caespitose: growing in tufts
- Calathiform: basket- or cup-shaped
- Calciphilous: lime-loving
- Callus: a hardened or thickened area at the
point of attachment
- Calyx: the outer whorl of the perianth,
composed of the sepals, usually but not always green, which enclose
other flower parts in bud
- Campanulate: bell-shaped
- Canescent: with gray or white short hairs,
often having a hoary appearance
- Capillary: very slender and hairlike
- Capitate: in a globular or head-shaped cluster
- Capitulescence: a special term used in
Asteraceae to describe a group of associated heads--also called
capitula; it is analogous to an inflorescence)
- Capitulum: a raceme consisting of a tightly
packed head of almost stalkless flowers, as in the Asteraceae
- Capreolate: with tendrils
- Capsule: a dry, generally many-seeded fruit
divided into two or more seed compartments that dehisces or splits open
longitudinally with the line of dehiscence either through the locule
(loculicidal) or through the septa (septicidal), or, less commonly,
through pores (poricidal) or around the circumference (circumscissile)
- Carinate: keeled with one or more longitudinal
ridges
- Carpel: a simple pistil, or a single unit of a
compound pistil, the ovule-bearing portion of a flower
- Caryopsis: the grain or fruit of grasses
- Castaneous: dark reddish-brown
- Catkin: a spikelike, often pendulous,
inflorescence of petalless unisexual flowers, either staminate or
pistillate
- Caudate: bearing a tail or slender tail-like
appendage
- Caudex: the persistent, often woody base of an
otherwise annual herbaceous stem
- Cauline: attached to or referring to the stem,
as opposed to 'basal', often used to describe leaf position
- Cernuous: nodding, drooping
- Cespitose: having a densely clumped, tufted or
cushion-like growth form with the flowers extending above the clump
- Chaff: thin scales or bracts subtending
individual flowers in many species of the Asteraceae
- Chaparral: an area characterized by dense,
leathery-leaved, evergreen shrubs
- Chlorophyllous: of or containing chlorophyll
- Chlorotic: lacking chlorophyll
- Cilia: marginal hairs
- Ciliate: with a row of fine hairs situated
along the margin of a structure such as a leaf
- Ciliolate: with a marginal fringe of minute
hairs
- Cinereous: ash-colored, light-gray due to a
covering of short hairs
- Circumboreal: distributed around the globe at
northern latitudes
- Circumsessile: dehiscing along a transverse
circular line around the fruit or anther, so that the top separates or
falls off like a lid
- Cismontane: referring to the ocean-facing side
as opposed to the desert-facing side of the mountains
- Citreous: lemon-yellow
- Clasping: having the lower edges of a leaf
blade partly surrounding the stem
- Clavate: club-shaped, gradually thickened or
widened toward the apex
- Claw: the narrow, basal stalklike portion of
some sepals and petals
- Cleft: deeply cut, usually more than one-half
the distance from the margin to the midrib or base
- Cleistogamous: self-fertilizing, flowers not
opening
- Collar: in grasses the outer side of the leaf
at the junction of the sheath and blade
- Coma: a tuft of hairs, often at the tip of
seeds
- Complete: describing flowers that contain
petals, sepals, pistils and stamens
- Composite: a member of the Asteraceae,
or sunflower family, previously called the Compositae
- Compound: made up of two or more similar parts,
as in a leaf which has leaflets
- Concolor: of uniform color
- Confluent: running together or blending of one
part into another
- Connate: Describing similar structures that are
joined or grown together (compare adnate)
- Connivent: converging, but not actually fused
or united
- Conspecific: of the same species
- Contracted: narrowed or shortened as opposed to
open or spreading
- Convolute: rolled up longitudinally, with one
edge inside the other and the upper surface on the inside (compare revolute,
involute)
- Cordate: heart-shaped
- Coriaceous: leathery in texture
- Corm: an enlarged underground structure that
consists of stem tissue and thin scales
- Corneous: horny
- Corniculate: having little horns or hornlike
appendages
- Cornute: horned
- Corolla: the inner whorl of the perianth,
between the calyx and the stamens, a collective term for the petals of
a flower
- Coroniform: crown-shaped
- Corrugated: wrinkled, folded
- Corymb: a broad, flat-topped inflorescence in
which the flower stalks arise from different points on the main stem
and the marginal flowers are the first to open (compare cyme)
- Costate: ribbed, having longitudinal elevations
- Crenate: with shallow roundish or bluntish
teeth on the margin, scalloped
- Crenulate: similar to crenate, but with
smaller, rounded teeth
- Crisped: curled on the margin like a strip of
bacon
- Cristate: with a terminal tuft or crest
- Cruciform: cross-shaped
- Crustaceous: dry and brittle
- Cucullate: hooded or hood-shaped
- Culm: a hollow or pithy slender stem such as is
found in the grasses and sedges
- Cultivar: a form of a plant derived from
cultivation
- Cuneate: wedge-shaped, with the narrow part at
the point of attachment
- Cupule: a cup-shaped involucre, as in an acorn
- Cuspidate: tipped with an abrupt short, sharp,
firm point (compare mucronate)
- Cyathiform: cup-shaped
- Cyathium: the specialized inflorescence
characteristic of the Euphorbiaceae, consisting of a
flower-like, cup-shaped involucre which carries the several true
flowers within
- Cyme: a broad, flat-topped inflorescence in
which the central flower is the first to open (compare corymb)
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D
- Deca-: a prefix meaning ten
- Decumbent: prostrate at the base but ascending
at the end
- Decurrent: adnate to the petiole or stem and
extending downward, as a leaf base that extends downward along the stem
(compare surcurrent)
- Decussate: arranged in pairs along the stem
with each pair at right angles to the one above and below
- Deflexed: Bent downward or backward
- Dehiscent: opening spontaneously when ripe to
discharge the seed content (compare indehiscent)
- Deltoid: broadly triangular in shape
- Dense: congested, describing the disposition of
flowers in an inflorescence (compare open)
- Dentate: with sharp, outward-pointing teeth on
the margin
- Depauperate: starved or stunted, describing
small plants or plant communities that are growing under unfavorable
conditions
- Determinate: describes an inflorescence in
which the terminal flower blooms first, thereby halting further
elongation of the flowering stem (compare indeterminate)
- Dextrorse: turned to the right or spirally
arranged to the right (compare sinistrorse)
- Di-: prefix meaning two or twice
- Diandrous: having two stamens
- Dichotomous: branching regularly and repeatedly
in pairs
- Dicotyledon: a plant having two seed leaves,
one of the two major divisions of flowering plants (compare monocotyledon)
- Didymous: twinned, being in pairs
- Didynamous: with two pairs of stamens of
unequal length
- Diffuse: looosely branching or spreading
- Digitate: radiating from a common point, having
a fingered shape, i.e. a shape like an open hand
- Digynous: having two pistils
- Dimorphic: having two forms
- Dioecious: having staminate and pistillate
flowers on separate plants (compare monoecious)
- Disciform: having a flowering head that
contains both filiform and disk flowers, referring to members of the Asteraceae
- Discoid: having only disk flowers, referring
to flower heads in the Asteraceae
- Disjunct: separated from the main distribution
of the population
- Disk: the central portion of composite flowers,
made up of a cluster of disk flowers
- Dissected: finely cut or divided into many,
narrow segments
- Distal: the end opposite the point of
attachment, away from the axis (compare proximal)
- Distichous: two-ranked, that is with leaves on
opposute sides of a stem and in the same plane
- Distinct: having separate, like parts, those
not at all joined to each other, often describing the petals on a
flower (compare united)
- Disturbed: referring to habitats that have been
impacted by the actions of people
- Diurnal: growing in the daytime
- Divaricate: widely diverging or spreading
apart
- Divergent: diverging or spreading
- Divided: cut deeply, nearly or completely to
the midrib
- Dodeca-: prefix meaning twelve
- Dorsal: referring to the back or outer surface
- Dorsifixed: attached at the back (compare basifixed,
versatile)
- Drooping: erect or spreading at the base, then
bending downwards
- Drupe: a fleshy indehiscent fruit enclosing a
nut or hard stone containing generally a single seed such as a peach or
cherry
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E
- E-: prefix usually meaning without
- Ebeneous: black
- Eccentric: off-center, not positioned directly
on the central axis
- Echinate: prickly
- Ecotone: transition zone between two adjoining
communities
- Ecotype: those individuals adapted to a
specific environment or set of conditions
- Elliptic: broadest near the middle and tapering
gradually to both ends
- Elongate: stretched out, many times longer than
broad
- Emarginate: with a shallow notch at the apex
- Endemic: confined to a limited geographic area
- Endocarp: the inner layer of the pericarp,
which is the wall of the ripened ovary or fruit (compare mesocarp,
exocarp)
- Ensiform: sword-shaped, as applied to a leaf
- Entire: describing a leaf that has a
continuous, unbroken margin with no teeth or lobes
- Entomophilous: insect-pollinated
- Ephemeral: describes a plant or flower that
lasts for only a short time or blooms only occasionaly when conditions
are right
- Epigynous: with stamens, pistils, and sepals
attached to the top of the ovary (compare hypogynous)
- Erose: having an irregular margin as if it has
been gnawed
- Escapee: a plant that has escaped from
cultivation and now reproduces on its own
- Evanescent: fleeting, lasting for only a short
time
- Even-pinnate: a pinnately-compound leaf ending
in a pair of leaflets (compare odd-pinnate)
- Exfoliating: peeling off in thin layers or
flakes
- Exocarp: the outer layer of the pericarp of a
fruit (compare endocarp, mesocarp)
- Exotic: not native, introduced from another
area
- Exserted: projected from or extending beyond,
as stamens from a flower
- Extant: still surviving, not completely extinct
- Extirpated: destroyed or no longer surviving in
the area being referred to, but may survive outside of that area
- Extrorse: turned or opening outward away from
the axis (compare introrse)
- Exudate: a substance exuded or secreted from a
plant
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F
- Fabaceae: pea family
- Fagaceae: oak family
- Falcate: scimitar- or sickle-shaped
- Farinose: covered with a mealy or whitish
powdery substance
- Fascicle: a small cluster or bundle, a fairly
common leaf arrangement
- Fastigiate: clustered, parallel and erect,
having a broom-like appearance
- Fenestrate: with small slits or areas thinned
so as to be translucent
- Ferruginous: rust-colored
- Fertile: having the capacity to produce fruit,
having a pistil
- Filament: the basal, sterile portion of a
stamen below the anthers
- Filiform: (1) threadlike; (2) a type of flower
in the Asteraceae which is pistillate and has a very slender, tubular
corolla
- Fimbriate: having fringed margins
- Fistulose: hollow like a tube or pipe
- Flabellate: fan-shaped, as in a fan-shaped
structure
- Flaccid: soft and weak, limp
- Flange: a projecting rim or edge
- Flavescent: yellowish
- Flexuose or flexuous: with curves or bends,
somewhat zigzagged
- Floc: a tuft of soft, woolly hair
- Floccose: wooly, covered with soft wooly tufted
hairs that are usually easily rubbed off
- Floret: a small individual flower in a flower
head
- Floricane: the second-year flowering and
fruiting cane or shoot of Rubus (compare primocane)
- Fluted: with furrows or grooves
- Foliolate: having leaflets
- Follicle: a dry, many-seeded fruit derived
composedof a single carpel l and opening along one side only like a
milkweed pod
- Forb: a non-grasslike herbaceous plant
- Fovea: a small pit or depression
- Frond: a fern leaf
- Fructiferous: fruit-bearing
- Frutescent: shrubby or bushy in the sense of
being woody
- Fulvous: dull yellowish-brown or
yellowish-gray, tawny
- Funnelform: gradually widening upwards, as in
the flowers of morning glory
- Furcate: forked
- Furfuraceous: scurfy, branlike, flaky
- Fuscous: dark grayish-brown, dusky
- Fusiform: spindle-shaped, thickest in the
middle and drawn out at both ends
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G
- Gall: an abnormal growth on a plant that is
caused by insects
- Geniculate: bent abruptly like a knee or a
stove pipe
- Glabrate: becoming glabrous in age
- Glabrous: smooth, without hairs
- Gland: a depression or protuberance that exists
for the purpose of secreting
- Glandular: producing tiny globules of sticky or
oily substance
- Glans: a dry dehiscent fruit borne in a cupule,
such as the acorn
- Glaucescent: slightly glaucous
- Glaucous: covered with a thin, light-colored
waxy or powdery bloom
- Globose: globe-shaped, spherical
- Glochids: barbed bristles on cacti
- Glomerate: crowded, congested or compactly
clustered
- Glume: in grasses, the bracts (generally two)
that form the lowermost parts of the spikelet
- Glutinous: having a sticky surface
- Gracile: slender and graceful
- Grain: the fruit of grasses
- Gregarious: growing in groups or colonies
- Grenadine: bright red
- Gynobase: an elongation or enlargement of the
receptacle that supports the carpels or nutlets, as in many species of
the Boraginaceae
- Gynoecium: a collective term for the pistils of
a flower (compare androecium)
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H
- Habit: the overall appearance of a plant
- Halophyte: a plant that can tolerate an
abnormal amount of salt in the soil
- Hamate: hook-shaped, hooked at the tip
- Hastate: spear- or arrowhead-shaped with the
basal lobes facing outward
- Helicoid: coiled spirally like a spring or a
snail shell
- Heliotropic: the movement of plant parts in
response to a light source
- Hemiparasite: a plant that derives its energy
both from parasitism and from photosynthesis
- Herbaceous: fleshy-stemmed, not woody
- Heteromorphic: of one or more kind or form
- Heterostylous: having different kinds of style
(and stamen) lengths
- Hexa-: a prefix meaning six
- Hibernal: flowering or appearing in the winter
- Hilum: a scar on a seed indicating its point of
attachment
- Hip: a fleshy, berry-like fruit, as in some
members of the Rosaceae
- Hirsute: pubescent with stiff, coarse hairs
- Hispid: rough-haired
- Hoary: covered with white or gray, short, fine
hairs
- Holosericeous: covered with fine, silky hairs
- Homomorphic: all of the same kind or form
- Hooked: abruptly curved at the tip
- Host: a plant providing nourishment to a
parasite
- Humifuse: spreading along or over the ground
- Humistrate: lying on the ground
- Hyaline: thin, translucent or transparent
- Hydrophytic: adapted to growing in water
- Hypanthium: a cup-shaped enlargement of the
receptacle, creation by the fusion of sepals, petals and stamens
- Hypogynous: with stamens, petals and sepals
atteched below the ovary (compare epigynous)
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I
- Imbricate: overlapping, like shingles on a roof
- Imperfect: describes a flower that has stamens
or pistils but not both
- Implicate: twisted together, intertwined
- Incised: cut, often deeply, usually
irregularly, but seldom as much as one-half the distance to the midrib
or base
- Included: not exserted or protruding beyond the
surrounding organ
- Incumbent: a term referring to seeds in which
the embronic root is wrapped around and lies adjacent to the back of
one of the two cotylodons (compare accumbent)
- Indehiscent: not opening by itself, said of a
seed pod (compare dehiscent)
- Indeterminate: describes an inflorescence in
which the outer or lower flowers bloom first, allowing an indefinite
elongation of the flowering stem (compare determinate)
- Indigenous: native to an area
- Indurate: hardened and/or stiffened
- Indusium: a scale-like outgrowth on a fern leaf
which forms a covering for the sporangia
- Inferior ovary: one that is situated below the
point of attachment of the sepals and petals, and possibly below the
point of attachment of all other flower parts and embedded in the
floral stem
- Inflexed: turned abruptly or bent inwards
- Inflorescence: the flowering portion of a plant
- Infra-: a prefix meaning below or beneath
- Inframedial: below the middle
- Infraspecific: below the species level
- Infundibular: funnel-shaped
- Innate: borne at the apex
- Inter-: a prefix meaning between or among
- Internode: the portion of a stem between two
successive nodes
- Interrupted: not continuous, with gaps
- Introrse: turned or opening inward toward the
axis as an anther toward the center of a flower (compare extrorse)
- Involucel: a secondary involucre as in the Apiaceae
- Involucre: a set of bracts subtending a flower
or an inflorescence
- Involute: with both edges inrolled toward the
midnerve on the upper surface (compare revolute)
- Irregular: describes a flower that is not
radially symmetric, the similar parts of which are unequal in size or
form
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J
- Joint: the point on a plant stem from which a
leaf or leaf-bud grows, more commonly termed a node
- Jugate: with parts in pairs
- Junciform: rush-like in appearance
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K
- Keel: the two lower petals of most pea flowers,
united or partially joined to form a structure similar to the keel of a
boat
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L
- Labiate: lipped
- Lacerate: irregularly cut or cleft
- Laciniate: cut into slender lobes
- Lacunate: pitted
- Lacustrine: growing around lakes
- Laevigate: lustrous, shining
- Lanate: with long tangled wooly hairs
- Lanceolate: Significantly longer than wide and
widest below the middle, gradually tapering toward the apex
- Lanulose: with very short hairs, minutely downy
or wooly
- Lateral: borne at or on the side of
- Latifoliate: with broad leaves
- Leaflet: one segment of a compound leaf
- Legume: a dry, dehiscent fruit derived from a
single carpel and usually opening along two lines of dehiscence like a
pea pod
- Lemma: in grasses, the lower and usually larger
of the two bracts of the floret
- Lepidote: covered with small scurfy scales
- Liana: a herbaceous or woody, usually
perennial, climbing vine that roots in the ground and is characteristic
especially of tropical forests
- Ligneous: woody
- Ligulate: (1) Describing a floral head in the Asteraceae
that contains only ray flowers, or ligules; (2) strap-shaped
- Limb: the upper, expanded portion of a corolla
which has fused petals
- Linear: long and narrow with sides that are
parallel or nearly so
- Lineate: marked with parallel lines
- Lingulate: tongue-shaped
- Littoral: growing along the shore
- Livid: pale grayish-blue
- Lobe: usually a rounded segment of an organ
- Lobed: more or less deeply cut but not as far
as the midrib
- Lobulate: with small lobes
- Locule: a cavity of the ovary which contains
the ovules
- Loculicidal: said of a capsule, longitudinally
dehiscent through the ovary wall at or near the center of each chamber
or locule (compare poricidal, septicidal)
- Loment: a legume which is constricted between
the seeds
- Lunate: crescent-shaped
- Lurid: pale brown to yellowish-brown
- Lutescent: yellowish
- Lyrate: lyre-shaped, pinnatifid with the
terminal segment large and rounded and the lower lobes increasingly
smaller toward the base
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M
- Machaerantheroid: having involucral bracts
with
recurved tips
- Macro-: prefix meaning large or long
- Macrophyllous: having large leaves
- Maculate: spotted or blotched
- Malacophyllous: with soft leaves
- Malvaceous: mallow-like
- Mammilate: with nipple-like protuberances
- Manicate: with a thick, interwoven pubescence
- Many: same as numerous, often used to describe
the number of stamens on a flower and specifically meaning eleven or
more
- Marcescent: withering but still persistent as
with petals and sepals or the basal leaves of some plants
- Margin: the edge, as of a leaf blade
- Marginate: distinctly margined
- Matinal: blooming in the early morning
- Mauve: bluish or pinkish-purple
- Mealy: describing a surface that is covered
with minute, usually rounded particles
- Mega-: prefix meaning large
- Membranous: thin, flexible and more or less
translucent, like a membrane
- -merous: a suffix utilized to indicate the
number of parts or divisions in a particular structure or organ, as in
4-merous or 4-parted
- Mesic: describes a habitat that is generally
moist throughout the growing season (compare xeric)
- Meso-: prefix meaning middle
- Mesocarp: the middle layer of the pericarp of a
fruit (compare endocarp, exocarp)
- Mesophytic: adapted to growing under medium or
average conditions, especially relating to water supply
- Micro-: prefix meaning small
- Microphyllous: bearing small leaves
- Midrib: the main or central rib or vein of a
leaf
- Monadelphous: having stamens with filaments
united in a single group, bundle or tube
- Monandrous: with a single stamen
- Monanthous: one-flowered
- Mono-: prefix meaning one
- Monocotyledon: a plant having only one
seed-leaf (compare dicotyledon)
- Monoecious: having both male and female flowers
on the same plant (compare dioecious)
- Monotypic: describing a genus that contains
only a single species
- Montane: of or pertaining to, or growing in,
the mountains
- Mucilaginous: slimy and moist
- Mucronate: having a short projection at the
tip, as of a leaf
- Multi-: prefix meaning many
- Multifid: cleft into very many narrow lobes or
segments
- Multiflorus: many-flowered
- Multifoliate: bearing many leaves
- Muricate: rounded or roughened with short, hard
or warty points
- Mycorrhizal: having a symbiotic relationship
between a fungus and the root of a plant
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-
N
- Nacreous: having a pearly luster
- Napiform: turnip-shaped
- Nascent: in the process of being formed
- Natant: floating in water
- Navicular: boat-shaped
- Nectary: a plant part that secretes nectar, a
sweet liquid that attracts bees, insects and birds
- Netted: same as reticulated, in the form or
pattern of a network
- Neuter: lacking a pistil or stamens
- Nidulent: lying within a cavity, embedded
within a pulp
- Nigrescent: blackish
- Nitid: lustrous, shining
- Niveous: white
- Nodding: hanging down
- Node: a point on a stem where leaves or
branches originate
- Nodose: knobby or knotty
- Nomophilous: growing in or loving pastures
- Notate: marked with lines or spots
- Numerous: eleven or more, same as 'many'
- Nut: a dry, usually one-seeded, indehiscent
fruit with a hard-walled exterior
- Nutant: nodding, drooping
- Nutlet: a small nut or one of the sections of
the mature ovary of some members of the Boraginaceae, Verbenaceae
or Lamiaceae
- Nyctanthous: night-flowering
- Nyctagimous: opening at night
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-
O
- Ob-: prefix signifying inversion or reversal of
normal direction
- Obconic: inversely cone-shaped and attached at
the pointed end
- Obcordate: inversely heart-shaped, attached at
the point
- Oblanceolate: inversely lanceolate
- Obligate: restricted to particular conditions
or circumstances
- Oblique: with sides unequal, usually describing
the base of a leaf
- Oblong: two to four times longer than broad
with nearly parallel sides, but broader than 'linear'
- Obovate: inversely ovate
- Obtuse: blunt or rounded at the apex
- Obverse: describing a leaf that is narrower at
the base than at the apex
- Obvolute: a vernation in which two leaves are
overlapping in the bud in such a manner that one-half of each is
external and the other half is internal, i.e. each leaf both overlaps
the next and is in turn overlapped by the one before
- Ocrea (pl. ocreae): a sheath around the stem
derived from the leaf stipules, primarily used in the Polygonaceae
- Ochreoleucous: yellowish-white, cream-colored
- Octo-: prefix meaning eight
- Odd-pinnate: describing a pinnately-compound
leaf with a single terminal leaflet (compare even-pinnate)
- Oligomeris: with less than the typical number
of parts
- Oligophyllous: with few leaves
- Olivaceous: olive-green
- Open: uncongested, usually describing the
organization of flowers in an inflorescence (compare dense)
- Opposite: describing leaves that are situated
in pairs at each node along an axis
- Orbicular: circular
- Ornithophillous: bird-pollinated
- Orophilous: growing in or preferring mountain
areas
- Oval: broadly elliptic, the width over half the
length
- Ovary: the basal portion of a pistil where
female germ cells develop into seeds after germination
- Ovate: egg-shaped, wider below the middle
- Ovoid: an egg-shaped solid
- Ovule: the structure that develops into the
seed inside the ovary
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-
P
- Pachyphyllous: with thick leaves
- Palate: an appendage or raised area on the
lower lip of the corolla which partially blocks the throat
- Palea: in grasses, the upper and generally
smaller of the two bracts of the floret
- Pallid: pale
- Palmate: radiating from a single point like the
spreading fingers of an outstretched hand
- Palmatifid: palmately cleft or lobed
- Paludose: growing in wet meadows or marshes
- Palustrine: same as paludose
- Pandurate: fiddle-shaped
- Panicle: a compound inflorescence in which the
branches are racemose and the flowers are pedicelled on the branches
- Pannose: with a covering of short, dense, felty
or wooly tomentum
- Papilionaceous: describing the structure of a
corolla typical of the Fabaceae with banner, wings and keel
- Pappose: pappus-bearing
- Pappus: collectively, the bristles, hairs or
scales at the apex of an achene in the Asteraceae
- Parasite: a plant which derives most or all of
its food from another organisim to which it attaches itself
- Parietal: attached to the wall of the ovary
instead of the axis
- Parted: lobed or cut in over half-way and often
very close to the base or midrib
- Pectinate: describing a pinnatifid leaf whose
segments are narrow and arranged like the teeth of a comb
- Pedicel: the stalk of a single flower that is
part of an inflorescence
- Peduncle: the stalk of a flower cluster, or of
a solitary flower not associated with others in an inflorescence
- Peltate: a type of leaf having its petiole
attached to the center of the lower surface of the blade
- Pendent: hanging downward or drooping
- Penta-: prefix meaning five
- Pepo: a fleshy, indehiscent fruit with a hard,
more or less thickened rind and a single many-seeded locule,
characteristic of the Cucurbitaceae
- Perennial: a plant living for more than two
years
- Perfect: containing both stamens and pistils
- Perfoliate: the stem apparently piercing the
leaf or surrounded by basally joined opposite leaves
- Perianth: a collective term for the calyx and
corolla
- Pericarp: the outer wall of mature fruit
- Perigynous: situated around but not attached to
the ovary directly, describing a flower whose stamens and pistils are
joined to the calyx tube and the ovary is superior
- Persicicolor: peach-colored
- Persistent: remaining attached after the usual
time of falling
- Petal: a single segment of a divided corolla
- Petaloid: having the appearance of a petal
- Petiole: the stalk of a leaf
- Phloem: the food conducting tissue of vascular
plants, bark
- Phreatophyte: a perennial plant that has deep
and extensive root systems that enable it to tap underground sources of
water
- Phyllary: one of the bracts below the
flowerhead in the Asteraceae
- Phytolaccaceae: pokeweed family
- Pilose: having long, soft, straight hairs
- Pinnate: with separate segments which are
arranged feather-like on either side of a common axis
- Pinnatifid: so deeply cleft or cut as to appear
pinnate
- Pisaceous: pea-green
- Pistil: the central reproductive organ of a
flower, consisting of ovary, style and stigma
- Pistillate: a female flower that has two or
more pistils but no functional stamens
- Planoconvex: flat on one side and rounded on
the other
- Plicate: folded like the pleats of a curtain
- Plumbeous: lead-colored
- Plumose: appearing plumelike or feathery from
fine hairs that line two sides of a central axis
- Poly-: prefix meaning many
- Polyandrous: with many stamens
- Polyanthous: with many flowers
- Polycephalous: with many flower heads
- Polygamous: having both unisexual and bisexual
flowers on the same plant
- Pome: a fleshy indehiscent fruit derived from
an inferior, compound ovary and consisting of a modified floral tube
surrounding a core with several seeds, such as an apple
- Poricidal: opening by pores, like a poppy
capsule (compare loculicidal, septicidal)
- Posterior: on the side next to the axis
(compare anterior)
- Prickle: a superficial, sharp-pointed outgrowth
of the bark or epidermis of a plant
- Primocane: the first-year (usually flowerless)
cane or shoots of Rubus (compare floricane)
- Procumbent: lying flat or trailing but not
rooting at the nodes
- Prostrate: lying flat
- Protandrous: describing a plant in which the
release of pollen precedes and does not overlap the period of stigma
receptivity (compare protogynous)
- Protogynous: describing a plant in which stigma
receptivity precedes and does not overlap the period of pollen release
(compare protandrous)
- Proximal: nearest the axis or base (compare distal)
- Ptero-: prefix meaning winged
- Pterocarpous: with winged fruits
- Pterospermous: with winged seeds
- Puberulent: minutely pubescent
- Pubescent: covered with short, soft hairs
- Punctate: dotted or pitted, often with glands
- Pulverulent: dusty or chalky, as applied to the
powdery coating on the stems and leaves of some plants
- Pulvinate: cushion- or mat-like
- Punctate: dotted with pits or with translucent,
sunken glands, or with colored dots
- Puniceous: crimson-colored
- Purpurescent: becoming purplish
- Pyriform: pear-shaped
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-
Q
- Quadrate: square
- Quadri-: prefix meaning four
- Quinate: with five nearly similar structures
from a common point
- Quinque-: prefix meaning five
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-
R
- Raceme: an elongate, unbranched inflorescence
with pedicelled flowers on the main stem
- Racemose: raceme-like or bearing racemes
- Rachilla: a small rachis, in particular the
axis of a grass spikelet
- Rachis: the main stalk of a flower cluster or
of a compound leaf, also that part of a fern frond stem that bears the
leaflets
- Radical: belonging to or proceeding from the
root
- Radiate: describing a flower head in the Asteraceae
that contains both ray and disk flowers
- Radicant: rooting from the stem
- Ramose: branching or branchy
- Rank: a vertical row usually of leaves or
bracts that can be either opposite or alternate
- Receptacle: the expanded apex of a flower stalk
which bears the floral organs, either such structures as individual
petals, sepals etc., or entire flowers in head-like inflorescences such
as is typical of the Asteraceae
- Recumbent: leaning or reposing upon the ground
- Recurved: curved backwards or outwards
- Reflexed: abruptly bent or curved downward
- Regular: describes a flower with petals or
sepals all of equal size and shape, i.e. radially symmetrical or
capable of being divided into mirror images on either side of any plane
that passes through the center
- Reniform: kidney-shaped or rounded with a notch
at the base
- Repand: with an undulating margin, less
strongly wavy than 'sinuate'
- Repent: creeping
- Reticulate: having a netted pattern
- Retrorse: Bent backward or downward, reflexed
(compare antrorse)
- Retuse: having a rounded apex with a shallow
notch
- Revolute: having the margins inrolled toward
the underside (compare convolute, involute)
- Rhizome: an underground stem capable of
producing new stems or plants at its nodes
- Rhombic: with the shape of a diamond
- Rosette: a cluster of leaves in a circular
arrangement at the base of a plant, often called the basal rosette
- Rostrate: having a beak or beak-like form
- Rotate: a rotate corolla is wheel-shaped with a
short tube and a wide horizontally flaring limb
- Rotundifolius: with round leaves
- Rubescent: becoming red or reddish
- Rubiginous: rust-colored
- Ruderal: growing in disturbed habitats, weedy
- Rudiment: an imperfectly developed organ, a
vestige
- Rufous: reddish-brown
- Rugose: wrinkled or bumpy
- Runcinate: sharply incised or pinnatifid with
the segments facing backwards
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S
- Saccate: sac-shaped or pouch-shaped
- Sagittate: arrowhead-shaped, with two retrorse
basal lobes
- Salient: projecting outward
- Salverform: with a slender tube abruptly
expanded into a rotate limb
- Samara: dry fruit with wings that do not open
when mature, as in maple trees
- Sanguineous: blood-red
- Sapid: with an agreeable taste
- Saponaceous: soapy
- Saprophytic: Deriving food from dead or
decaying organic material in the soil and usually lacking in
chlorophyll
- Sarcocaulis: with fleshy stems
- Saxatile: growing among rocks or in rocky, arid
situations
- Scaberulent: slightly scabrous
- Scabrous: rough to the touch
- Scalariform: ladder-like
- Scale: a greatly reduced leaf or other
outgrowth on a plant surface
- Scandent: climbing
- Scape: a leafless flowering stem arising
directly from the ground
- Scarify: to roughen, score or scrape the hard,
outer coating of a seed to assist in the absorption of moisture before
germination, a process that many desert wash seeds require
- Scarious: thin, dry, membranous and more or
less translucent
- Scissile: splitting easily
- Sclerophyllous: with stiff, firm leaves
- Scorpioid: describing a coiled inflorescence
- Scurfy: covered with small scale-like or
bran-like particles or projections
- Sebaceous: tallowy or fatty
- Secund: Borne from only one side of an axis
- Semi-: prefix meaning half
- Sepal: a single segment of a divided calyx
- Septate: divided by one or more partitions
- Septicidal: said of a capsule, longitudinally
dehiscent through the ovary wall at or near the center of each septa,
preserving each locule as an intact entity (compare loculicidal,
poricidal)
- Septum: any kind of a partition, specifically
the wall between chambers in a compound ovary
- Seriate: arranged in rows or series
- Sericeous: covered with long, soft, straight,
appressed hairs giving a silky appearance
- Serpentine: refers to soils that are low in
calcium and high in magnesium and iron, derived from greenish or
gray-green rocks that are essentially magnesium silicate, other
characteristics of which are a high nickel and chromium content, and a
low content of nutrients such as nitrogen
- Serrate: having sharp, forward-pointing teeth
on the margin
- Serrulate: serrate with very small teeth
- Sessile: attached directly and without a
petiole, pedicel or other type of stalk, said of either leaves or
flowers
- Setaceous: bristle-like
- Setose: covered with bristles
- Sheath: a leafy, tubular structure usually on a
sedge or grass that envelopes the stem
- Shrub: a small, woody plant with several stems
- Sigmoid: double-curved, S-shaped
- Silicle: a fruit similar to a silique, but much
shorter, not much longer than wide
- Silique: a type of capsule found in the
Brassicaceae, either half of which peels away from a central,
transparent, dividing membrane
- Simple: a leaf that has one part, not
subdivided into leaflets
- Sinistrorse: turned to the left or spirally
arranged to the left (compare dextrorse)
- Sinuate: strongly or deeply wavy, usually
referring to a leaf margin
- Sinus: the space or division, usually on a
leaf, between two lobes or teeth
- Sori: clusters of spore sacs on a fern frond
(singular: sorus)
- Sp: abbreviation for 'species'
- Spadix: a floral spike or head in which the
flowers are borne on a fleshy axis
- Spathe: a large bract or pair of bracts
subtending and usually partially enclosing an inflorescence
- Spatulate: spoon-shaped, gradually widening to
a rounded apex
- Specific epithet: the second part of a
scientific name which identifies the species
- Spicule: a short, pointed, epidermal projection
- Spike: an elongated, unbranched inflorescence
with sessile or nearly-sessile flowers
- Spikelet: in grasses, the smallest aggregation
of florets plus any subtending glumes
- Spine: a sharp-pointed rigid structure, usually
a highly modified leaf or stipule
- Spinescent: bearing a spine or spine-like point
- Spinose: having a stiff and tough acuminate tip
- Spinulose: bearing very small spines
- Sporangium: a spore-case or sac in which spores
are produced in a fern
- Spp: abbreviation for the plural of 'species'
- Spumose: foamy or frothy
- Spur: a hollow extension of a petal or sepal
such as characterizes the larkspurs, and which often produces nectar
- Squamate: having or producing scales
- Squarrose: having spreading, recurved tips
- Ssp: abbreviation for 'subspecies'
- Stamen: the male or pollen-bearing organ of a
flower, composed of filament and anthers
- Staminate: describing a male flower that
contains one or more stamens but no functional pistils
- Staminode: a sterile stamen or other
nonfunctional structure occupying the position and having the overall
appearance of a stamen
- Standard: also called a banner, this is the
upper petal or segment of a papilionaceous flower
- Stellate: starlike, with radiating branches and
often referring to the pattern of hairs on the surface of a leaf
- Stem: the main upward-growing axis of a plant
which bears the leaves and flowers
- Stenopetalous: with narrow petals
- Stenophyllous: with narrow leaves
- Stigma: the terminal portion of a pistil, which
receives the pollen
- Stipe: that portion of a fern frond below the
rachis, i.e. below where the leaflets are attached
- Stipitate: borne on a stipe or stalk
- Stipule: an appendage at the base of a petiole,
usually in pairs
- Stolon: an elongated horizontal shoot above or
below the ground, rooting at the nodes or apex
- Stomate: a small pore or opening on the surface
of a leaf through which gaseous exchange takes place, i.e. the
diffusion of carbon dioxide, oxygen and water vapor
- Stone: the hard, woody endocarp enclosing the
seed of a drupe
- Stramineus: straw-colored
- Striate: with fine longitudinal lines or ridges
- Strict: very straight and upright
- Strigose: covered with rough, stiff, sharp
hairs that are more or less parallel to a particular surface
- Strobilus: an inflorescence that is
characterized by imbricated bracts or scales such as are borne on the
ephedras
- Style: the narrowed portion of a pistil between
and connecting the ovary and the stigma
- Sauveolent: fragrant
- Sub-: prefix meaning under, slightly, somewhat
or almost
- Suberose/Suberous: corky-textured
- Subspecies: a group of plants within a species
that has consistent, repeating, genetic and structural distinctions
- Subtend: to occupy a position below and
adjacent to
- Subulate: awl-shaped
- Succulent: fleshy, juicy and thickened
- Suffruticose: low shrubby, with the lower part
of the stem woody and the upper part herbaceous
- Suffused: tinted or tinged
- Sulcate: grooved or furrowed
- Sulfureous: sulfur-colored
- Summer annual: plant with seeds germinating in
spring or early summer and completing flowering and fruiting in late
summer or early fall (compare winter annual)
- Superior ovary: one that is located above the
perianth and free of it
- Surcurrent: extending upward from the point of
insertion, as a leaf base that extends up along the stem (compare decurrent)
- Surficial: growing near the ground, or spread
over the surface of the ground
- Suture: a junction or seam of union, or a line
of dehiscence
- Swale: a depression or shallow hollow in the
ground, typically moist
- Sympatric: growing together with, or having the
same range as
- Sympetalous: having the petals more or less
united
- Syn-: prefix meaning united
- Synandrous: with united anthers
- Synoecious: having male and female flowers in
the same flowerhead
- Synsepalous: having the sepals more or less
united
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-
T
- Taproot: the primary root continuing the axis
of the plant downward often quite deeply into the ground
- Tawny: tan in color
- Taxon: any group of plants occupying a
particular hierarchical category, such as genus or species
- Tendril: a slender portion of a leaf or stem,
modified for twining
- Tenuous: slender or thin
- Tepal: a collective term for sepals and petals,
used when they cannot be easily differentiated
- Terete: circular in cross-section
- Terminal: at the end of the branch or stem
- Tesselate: checkered
- Ternate: in three's
- Tetra-: prefix meaning four
- Thorn: a short, stiff, sharp-pointed branch
- Throat: in some corollas with fused petals, the
point of juncture between the tube and limb, a somewhat difficult point
to distinguish
- Tiller: in grasses the young vegetative shoots
- Tomentose: wooly, with long, soft, matted hairs
- Toothed: having small lobes or points along the
margin (as on a leaf)
- Tortuous: twisted or bent
- Transpiration: emission of water vapor from the
leaves
- Transverse: at a right angle to the
longitudinal axis of a structure
- Tri-: prefix meaning three
- Triad: a cluster of three, as spikelets of Hordeum
or Hilaria
- Triandrous: having three stamens
- Trichome: a hair-like outgrowth from the
epidermis
- Trichotomous: three-forked
- Trifid: three-cleft to about the middle
- Trifoliate: having three leaves
- Trifoliolate: having three leaflets
- Tripinnate: thrice divided
- Tropism: the turning of a plant part such as a
leaf in response to some external stimuli
- Truncate: with a base or apex appearing as if
cut straight across
- Tube: the lower or narrower portion of a
corolla or calyx
- Tuber: a short, thickened underground stem
which bears numerous buds
- Tubercle: a knoblike projection
- Tufted: in a dense cluster
- Tumescent: somewhat tumid, swelling
- Tumid: swollen
- Tunicate: having several concentric layers,
such as in onions
- Turbinate: shaped like a top or inverted cone
- Twining: climbing by coiling around some
support
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U
- Umbel: an inflorescence in which the flower
stalks arise from a common point (in a compound umbel, this branching
is repeated)
- Umbellet: a secondary umbel in a compound umbel
- Umbellulate: in the form of or having the
appearance of an umbel
- Umbraculate: umbrella-shaped
- Unarmed: lacking thorns or prickles
- Uncinate: hooked near the apex or having the
form of a hook
- Unctuous: greasy, oily
- Undulate: wavy
- Unguiculate: contracted at the base into a
claw, as a petal
- Uni-: prefix meaning one
- Unilocular: having only a single locule in the
ovary
- Uniseriate: arranged in one row or series
- Unisexual: bearing either stamens or pistils
but not both
- United: describes petals that are fused
together
- Urceolate: urn-shaped or pitcher-like,
contracted at the mouth
- Urent: stinging
- Utricle: a small, thin-walled, single-seeded,
more or less bladdery-inflated fruit
- Uva: a grape-like berry formed from a superior
ovary
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V
- Vaginate: provided with or surrounded by a
sheath
- Valvate: opening by valves or provided with
valves
- Valve: one of the parts or segments into which
a dehiscent fruit splits
- Varicose: swollen or enlarged in places
- Variegated: having a variety of colors
- Vascular: containing both xylem, the principal
water and mineral-conducting tissue, and phloem, food conducting tissue
- Vein: the vascular portion of a leaf
- Velutinous: velvety
- Venation: the arrangement of veins in a leaf
- Ventral: on the inner or axis side of an organ
or the upper surface of a leaf
- Ventricose: inflated or swollen unequally on
one side
- Vermicular: worm-shaped or wormlike, or of
worm-eaten appearance
- Vernal: appearing in the spring
- Vernation: the arrangement of leaves within a
bud
- Vernicose: appearing as though varnished
- Verrucose: covered with wart-like projections
- Versatile: referring to an anther which
attaches at or near its middle and is able to turn freely on its
support (compare basifixed, dorsifixed)
- Versicolor: having various colors
- Verticillate: same as 'whorled'
- Vesicle: a bladder or cavity
- Vespertine: opening or functioning in the
evening
- Villous: with fine, long, unmatted hairs
- Vinaceous: wine-colored
- Violaceous: violet-colored
- Virescent: becoming green or greenish
- Virgate: wand-like, as a straight, slender,
erect stem
- Viscid: sticky or greasy
- Vitreous: transparent
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W
- Wanting: absent, lacking, nonexistent
- Weed: a troublesome or aggressive plant that
intrudes where it is not wanted, especially a plant that vigorously
colonizes disturbed areas
- Whorl: a circle of three or more structures
radiating outward from the same node
- Wing: a thin, paperlike flat margin bordering
or extending from a seed capsule, stem or flower
- Winter annual: plant with seeds germinating in
late summer or fall and completing flowering and fruiting in spring or
summer (compare summer annual)
- Woolly: having soft, woollike hairs
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X
- X: a symbol which when placed before a specific
epithet indicates a hybrid of two species
- Xanthic: yellowish
- Xeric: pertaining to arid or desert conditions,
implying a minimal water supply throughout most of the year (compare mesic)
- Xero-: prefix meaning dry
- Xerophytic: adapted to dry or arid conditions,
places where fresh water is scarce or where water absorption is
difficult due to an excess of dissolved salts
- Xylem: the water-conducting tissue of vascular
plants
- Xylocarp: a hard, woody fruit such as the
coconut
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Z
- Zonate: marked or colored in circular rings or
zones
- Zoophilous: animal-pollinated
- Zygomorphic: with inequality in the size or
form of similar parts, specifically bilaterally symmetric and capable
of being bisected into equal mirror-image halves along one plane only
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