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N with malus towards none - Genesis Nursery

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Burmanniaceae plants of the Burmania family, from the genus name, Burmannia, and -aceae, the standardized<br />

Latin suffix of plant family names.<br />

burr- Latin burrus -a -um, red.<br />

burra Latin burra, nonsense, a trifle.<br />

burranicum Latin burranicum, a vessel for milk, a vessel for a burranicus drink composed of milk and must<br />

or new wine.<br />

burricus Latin burricus, burrici m. (burrichus, burrichi), a small horse.<br />

burs-, bursa, -bursa Latin a hide; a purse<br />

bursa Greek βυρσα, bursa, ox-hide, hide, skin.<br />

bursa, bursae f. Latin pouch, purse; supply of money, funds.<br />

bursa-pastoris bur'sa-pastor'is (BUR-sa -- pas-TORE-is) New Latin, from Medieval Latin bursa bag, purse, from<br />

Late Latin, oxhide, from Greek βυρσα, byrsa, and Latin pastoris, of a shepherd. According to Alcock (1876)<br />

bursa-pastoris is from Gerard, but the name was historically pera-pastoris, from older authors, including<br />

Lonicerus. Derived from Latin pera, a pouch, purse, or satchel, and pastoris, of a sheperd. Bursa may be a<br />

Latinization of the French bourse, a purse or pouch. The French name is Bourse de Pasteur, Sheperd’s-Purse.<br />

Bursera Bur'sera (BUR-ser-a) honoring the Danish botanist Joachim Burser (1583-1639),American flowering<br />

trees and shrubs.<br />

Burseraceae Bursera'ceae (bur-sur-AY-see-ee) plants of the Bursera family, gum-yielding trees, from the genus<br />

name, Bursera, and -aceae, the standardized Latin suffix of plant family names.<br />

bursiformis, bursarius pocket-shaped, pouch-shaped<br />

bushii C. bushii, after its discoverer, Benjamine Franklin Bush (1858-1937), American botanist.<br />

-bus Latin suffix, having the quality of.<br />

bust-, bustum, -bustum Latin bustum, a funeral pile, grave mound, tomb.<br />

buteo, -buteo, buteoni- Latin buteo, buteonis, a kind of hawk (buzzard?). As a cognomen<br />

butom-, butomus, -butomus Greek βουτοµον, boutomon, a kind of water plant; a sedge Carex riparia.<br />

Butomaceae plants of the Rush family, Butomus, from the genus name, Butomus, and -aceae, the standardized<br />

Latin suffix of plant family names.<br />

butomos sedge<br />

Butomus New Latin, from Greek boutomos, boutomon sedge; Greek butomos / butomon, marsh plant; from<br />

Greek bous, cow, and temno, to cut; for the sharp leaves, known or believed to cut mouths of cattle<br />

butorid New Latin a bittern<br />

buturum, buturi n., butyron, butyri n. Latin butter.<br />

bututzim cabbage<br />

butyr-, butyrum, -butyrum Latin butryum, butter.<br />

butyraceus butter-like<br />

butyrosus -a -um butter yielding<br />

bux-, buxus, -buxus Latin the box tree<br />

Buxaceae plants of the Bux family, Buxus, from the genus name, Buxus, and -aceae, the standardized Latin suffix<br />

of plant family names.<br />

Buxbaumia, buxbaumii New Latin for Johann Christian Buxbaum (1693-1730), German botanist, member of<br />

the Russian Academy of Science, professor of botany at St. Petersburg, one of the first to write on the flora of<br />

Estonia, collected plants in the Far East; see also Buxbaumia, a genus of mosses (order Buxbaumiales)<br />

buxifolius -a -um buxifo'lius (bux-i-FO-lee-us) box-leaved, <strong>with</strong> leaves like Buxus, from , and folium, foli(i), n.,<br />

noun, a leaf.<br />

buxiformis -is -e<br />

byas Greek βυας, the eagle owl, Bubo bubo.<br />

byblis Greek βυβλις, byblis, a nymph.<br />

byblo- Greek βυβλος, papyrus.<br />

bycano- Greek βυκανη, bukane, a spiral trumpet, a horn.<br />

bycto- Greek βυκτης, byktes, a swelling, blustering, hurricane.<br />

byo Greek βυω, byo, stuff full of, plug <strong>with</strong>, stow away.<br />

byrfira the name of a plaster.<br />

byrr-, byrrh- Latin byrrus -a -um, red, flame-colored.<br />

byrs-, byrsa, -byrsa, byrso Greek βυρσα, byrsa, ox hide, a hide,a skin.<br />

bysma Greek βυσµα, bysma, plug, bung.<br />

byss-, bysso, byssus, -byssus Greek fine thread; fine linen; the depths of the sea

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