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N with malus towards none - Genesis Nursery

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ucarius, bucharicus from Bokhara in Turkestan<br />

bucc-, bucca, -bucca Latin bucca, the cheek.<br />

bucca, buccae f. Latin jaw, mouth; mouthful; cheek <strong>with</strong> blowing a trumpet; also cavity of the knee joint.<br />

buccin- Latin a trumpet; a shellfish<br />

buccin- Latin buccina, bucina, a crooked trumpet, sheperd’s horn, military horn.<br />

buccina, buccinae f. Latin noun, horn; bugle, watch-horn; curved trumpet, war trumpet; shell Triton blew.<br />

buccinator one who blows a horn, trumpeter, proclaimer.<br />

buccinatorius, bucinat- well-known(?)<br />

bucciniiformis, buciniiformis trumpet shaped<br />

bucephalophorus resembling a bullock’s head, in shape or markings, in one source, better as bearing an ox<br />

head, from and Greek κεφαλή, kephale, head.<br />

bucephalus ox-headed, ox’s head<br />

bucer-, bucerus -a -um Latin buceros, horned<br />

buchananii for John Buchanan (1819-1898), Scottish botanist who worked in New Zealand, Carex<br />

buchananii.<br />

bucharicus from Bokhara in central Asia<br />

Buchloë New Latin, a contraction of Bubalochloë from Greek βουβαλος, boubalos, buffalo, or Greek bous,<br />

cow, ox or head of cattle, and χλόη, chloë, young grass or a young green shoot, similar to Greek chloos light<br />

green.<br />

bucolic- Greek βουκολικος, boukolikos, pastoral, rustic.<br />

Buchnera New Latin, after J.G. Buchner (18th century German botanist<br />

bucinatus like a curved horn<br />

Bucklandiella from Monte Buckland, mountain of Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego, name commemorating<br />

William Buckland (1784-1856), geologist, canon of Christ Church, Oxford, dean of Westminster from 1845,<br />

and Latin -ella, diminutive.<br />

buda, budae f. Latin noun, sedge.<br />

budama bugloss<br />

Buddleia Bud'dleja (BUD-lee-a) named for the Reverend Adam Buddle (1661-1715), British botanist and<br />

clergyman.<br />

buddleifolius -a -um buddleja-leaved, from , and folium, foli(i), n., noun, a leaf.<br />

Buddlejaceae Buddleja'ceae (bud-lee-AY-see-ee), from the genus name, Buddleia, and -aceae, the standardized<br />

Latin suffix of plant family names.<br />

buddleoides buddleja-like<br />

bufo, -bufo, bufoni- Latin a toad<br />

bufo, bufonis m. Latin noun, a toad.<br />

bufonis -is -e, bufonius -a -um bufo'nis (boo-FO-nis) bufo'nius (boo-FO-nee-us) of the color of a toad, pertaining<br />

to or like a toad; growing in damp places, from bufo, bufonis m., Latin noun, a toad.<br />

Buglossoides bugloss-like, from βουγλωσσος-οειδης, bouglossos-oeides.<br />

buglossus -a -um ox-tongued, from βουγλωσσος, bouglossos, the Greek name for Anchusa, a reference to the<br />

rough-textured leaves, bugloss is Lucopsis arvensis, from , and γλωσσος, glôssos, tongue.<br />

bul-, bules, -bules, buli- Greek βουλη, boule, will, determination, consel.<br />

-bula, -bulum Latin suffix for an instrument of means, as in incunabulum,or fundibulum.<br />

bulb, bulb-, bulbus, -bulbus Latin a bulb, an onion, referring to a bulb, from bulb-us, from Greek βολβός,<br />

bolbos, onion, bulbous root.<br />

bulbiceps a stem bulbous at the base, in Jackson (1900) listed as from Latin bulbus, bulbi, m,. an onion or a bulb,<br />

and caput, capitis, n., a head, of New Latin ceps, head. ‘-ceps’ is possibly from Latin caepa (cepa) -ae f. and<br />

caepe (cepe) -is, n. onion, as in cepacious.<br />

bulbiferus -a -um bulb-bearing, onion-bearing; bulbil-bearing, from modern Latin bulbus, bulb, from Greek<br />

βολβός, bolbos, onion, bulbous root, and -fer, from ferre, to bear.<br />

bulbigerus bulb-bearing, onions; bulbil-bearing<br />

Bulbilis onion, a small bulb<br />

bulbilliferus <strong>with</strong> bulbs sprouting from the leaf axils<br />

bulbillus modern Latin bulbillus, diminutive of bulbus.<br />

Bulbocodium <strong>with</strong> a woolly bulb<br />

bulbocodioides resembling Bulbocodium, Meadow Saffron<br />

Bulbophyllum Greek bolbos, bulb, and phyllon, leaf, referring to its leafy pseudobulb

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