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N with malus towards none - Genesis Nursery

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palmatifidus palmately cut, hand-shaped.<br />

palmatus -a -um palma'tus (pal-MAY-tus) palmate, lobed or divided like a hand <strong>with</strong> fingers.<br />

palmensis -is -e from the Isle of Palms, Canaries.<br />

palmeri palm'eri (PALM-er-eye)<br />

palmerianus -a -um palmeria'nus (pal-mer-ee-AY-nus)<br />

palmifolius palm-leaved<br />

palmiform shaped like the palm of the hand (said of leaves).<br />

palmipes broad-based.<br />

palmita relating to palms.<br />

palolu cupinum rye grass, lolivm perenne, from Dioscorides.<br />

palp Latin touch, feel<br />

palpator, -palpator Latin a feeler<br />

palpebr, palpebra an eyelid; wink, blink, from classical Latin palpebra eyelid, from palpāre to touch softly,<br />

pat, caress, coax, flatter.<br />

palpebratus eye-lid-like.<br />

palpi Latin a feeler, palp<br />

palpit Latin throb<br />

palt, palto, paltum Greek a dart<br />

palu, paludi, palustr Latin a marsh, swamp<br />

palumbaris holy vervain<br />

palumbinus of the color of the wood-pigeon.<br />

paludosus -a -um paludo'sus (pal-oo-DOE-sus) marshy, marsh-loving, growing in marshy places, from Latin<br />

palus and –udis, a swamp, marsh, bog<br />

palus, -palus Latin a stake; a marsh, swamp<br />

paluster -tris -tre, pa-LUS-ter; palus'tre (pal-US-tree) marsh-living, marsh-loving, of swamps, swamp loving, of<br />

marshes, or growing in bogs, bog-loving, from Latin paluster -tris -tre marshy, boggy, of swampy ground, from<br />

palus, paludis; palustris is often used as a masculine ending in plant names.<br />

pam, pamm Greek all<br />

pamphylicus from Pamphylia, Asia Minor (ancient geography).<br />

pampin-, pampinus a tendril, from classical Latin pampinus vine-shoot, vine foliage, of uncertain origin<br />

pampiniform resembling the tendrils of a vine.<br />

pan Greek all; a torch<br />

pan, pani, panis, -panis Latin bread<br />

panace Greek all-healing<br />

panaces all-heal; Hercules' woundwort<br />

panacinus resembling Otago, Ivy Tree, Panax.<br />

panagorace plant <strong>with</strong> healing and diuretic properties, from Dynamid.<br />

panamensis from Panama.<br />

panamintensis -is -e panaminten'sis (pan-a-min-TEN-sis)<br />

-panax A reference to a plant in the Aralia family, usually the genus Panax, which includes the Ginseng<br />

plant; panax comes from two Greek words which mean heal all afflictions, or cure all, and for Karl Linnaeus,<br />

considered it a panacea.<br />

Panax derived from classical Latin panacēa, any of various plants reputed to have universal healing powers,<br />

also personified as the daughter of Aesculapius from Hellenistic Greek πανάκεια, panakeia, a plant reputed to<br />

have universal healing powers, universal remedy, from Hellenistic Greek πανακής, panakes, all-healing. Also<br />

Greek, all-remedy, panak-, panax, from panakeia, from panakēs, all-healing, panacea (from pan- and -akēs --<br />

from akeisthai to heal) and -ia -y; akin to Greek akos remedy. (Araliaceae)<br />

panchroma verbena<br />

pand Latin spread out; bend<br />

Pandanaceae plants of the Screw-Pine family, from the genus name, Pandanus, and -aceae, the standardized<br />

Latin suffix of plant family names.<br />

pandanifolius <strong>with</strong> leaves like Pandanus, the screw pine<br />

pandanoides resembling Screw Pine.<br />

pandion the osprey, from Greek mythology a king of Athens; classical Latin Pandīōn, ancient Greek<br />

Πανδίον, the name of the father of Procne and Philomela in classical mythology<br />

pandur- referring to a fiddle shape

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