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N with malus towards none - Genesis Nursery

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Drymaria Greek drymos, forest, alluding to habitat of at least one species<br />

drymieus, drymeius oak forest loving<br />

drymarioides drymario'ides (dry-mar-ee-OH-i-dees)<br />

Drymocallis Drymocal'lis (dry-mo-KAL-is) (Rosaceae)<br />

dryophilus oak loving<br />

Dryopteridaceae Dryopterida'ceae (dry-op-ter-i-DAY-see-ee), from the genus name, Dryopteris, and -aceae, the<br />

standardized Latin suffix of plant family names.<br />

Dryopteris Dryop'teris (dry-OP-ter-is, or dree-OP-te-ris) oak fern, the wood-fern genus, from the Greek drys oak,<br />

or tree, and pteris a kind of fern, from pteron, a feather, a wing, Sanskrit patati he flies, falls, in possible reference<br />

to the plants habitat.<br />

drynarioides drynaria-like<br />

drypt-, drypto- Greek tear, scratch.<br />

dschungaricus from Dschunga, China<br />

du-, duo Latin two, double.<br />

du maître d’ecole French cv. of the schoolmaster<br />

dubi- Latin doubtful.<br />

dubius -a -um du'bius (DOO-bee-us) from Latin doubtful, dubious, uncertain.<br />

duc-, duct Latin lead.<br />

Duchesnea Duchesn'ea (doo-SHANE-ee-a check this) New Latin for Antoine N. Duchesne (1747-1827), French<br />

botanist.<br />

Dudleya, dudleyana Dud'leya (DUD-lee-a) dudleya'na (dud-lee-AY-na) for William Russell Dudley (1849-<br />

1911), first professor of botany and head of the department at Stanford University.<br />

dudleyi dud'leyi (DUD-lee-eye) honoring William Russell Dudley (1849-1911), first professor of botany and<br />

head of the department at Stanford University, and discoveror of Juncus dudleyi.<br />

duinensis from Duino in the Bay or Trieste<br />

dul-, dulio-, dulo- Greek a slave, servant.<br />

dulc-, dulci- Latin sweet<br />

dulcamarus -a -um bitter-sweet, from Latin dulcis -is -e, sweet or pleasant, any taste not acrid, and amarus -<br />

a -um, bitter.<br />

Dulce bellum inexpertis. War is lovely for those who know nothing of it.<br />

dulich-, dulicho Latin long.<br />

Dulichium from the Latin Dulichium, Dolicha, from Greek Δολίχη, Doliche, a city or an island of the Ionian<br />

Sea, southeast of Ithaca, belonging to the kingdom of Ulysses, or Latin dulichium, a kind of sedge. According<br />

to Homer, Dulichium abounded in grass and wheat. Some sources refer to Dulichium as an ancient name for<br />

Euboia. Alternately from Greek δυο, duo, two, and λειχον, leikhon, scale, in reference to the glumes in two<br />

rows. (Cyperaceae)<br />

dulcis -is -e (DUL-kis) sweet or pleasant, any taste not acrid; tender. Eleocharis dulcis is the water chestnut.<br />

dumetoreum, dumetorum of bushes or hedges, of thickets and hedgerows, from dumetum, dumeti Latin<br />

noun, a thicket.<br />

dum-, dumus, -dumus Latin bramble.<br />

dumalis growing under bushes<br />

dumetorum thicket-like, bushy, growing into a thicket, of shrubby or bushy places, from dumetum, dumeti n.<br />

Latin noun, a thicket.<br />

dumosus -a -um bushy, of shrubby aspect, full of thorn bushes, from Latin dumosus, -a -um, overgrown <strong>with</strong><br />

thorn, briar or the like.<br />

dumulosus small bush like<br />

dumus, dumi m. Latin noun, a thorn or briar bush.<br />

dunkelpracht German cv. dark beauty<br />

dunkelste aller German cv. darkest of all<br />

dunnii dunn'ii (DUN-ee-eye)<br />

duo Latin two, double.<br />

Duobus temporibus oppugnant hostes: cum parati estis, et cum imparati estis. The enemy invariably attacks<br />

on two occasions: (a) when you are ready for them, (b) when you are not ready for them.<br />

duodec-, duodecim Latin twelve.<br />

duoden-, duodeni- growing in twelves, from Latin twelve each.<br />

dupl-, duplex, -duplex, duplic-, duplici- Latin double

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