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N with malus towards none - Genesis Nursery

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penuri- Latin want; in want<br />

peo-, peos, -peos Greek the penis<br />

pep-, peps, pept Greek digest; cook<br />

pepast Greek ripen<br />

peper, peperi, pepero Greek pepper<br />

Péperi Modern Greek Πέπερι, pepper.<br />

pepericarpus <strong>with</strong> pepper-like fruit.<br />

peperitis, peperitus pepper-like.<br />

Peperomia<br />

pepino Spanish cucumber<br />

pepita Spanish a gold nugget; a melon seed<br />

pepl-, pepla, peplo, peplum, -peplum Greek a gown, coat<br />

Peplis New Latin, from Latin, a plant, from Greek, wild purslane<br />

peploides peplo'ides (pep-LO-i-dees) peplis-like, resembling Peplis, Water-Purslane, New Latin, from Latin, the<br />

name of two plants, one of which was also called porcilaca, and the other syce, meconion, or mecon aphrodes, from<br />

Greek, wild purslane.<br />

peplus Latin peplus, from Greek peplos; probably akin to Latin pellis skin<br />

pepo, pepon Greek ripe; a melon<br />

pepo PE-po from the Latin name for a large pumpkin or marrow, fruit like a pumpkin or gourd; from<br />

classical Latin pepōn-, pepō (in post-classical Latin also pepon, c400) a water-melon or other gourd < ancient<br />

Greek πέπων, pepon, a kind of gourd or melon eaten when ripe, use as noun (short for πέπων σίκυος, pepon<br />

sikuos, lit. a ripe cucumber) of πέπων, pepon, (adjective) ripened, ripe, mellow, from the base of πέσσειν,<br />

pessein, (Attic πέττειν, pettein) to cook, from the same Indo-European base as classical Latin coquere to cook<br />

(OED)<br />

peponiformis of gourd-shape.<br />

peps-, pepsi Greek digest; cook<br />

pept-, pepti, pepto Greek digested; cooked<br />

per Latin through, by means of<br />

per, pera, -pera, pero Greek a pouch<br />

per, pero Greek maimed, mutilated<br />

per-, peri- surrounding<br />

per ardua ad astra Through perils to the stars, the motto of the British Royal Air Force.<br />

per capita latin lit. by the heads; individually<br />

per impossible hypothetically, Latin lit. assume the impossible<br />

per se in and of itself, Latn lit. through itself<br />

pera, perae f. Latin noun, a satchel; bag slung over shoulder for day's provisions.<br />

peranguste very narrowly<br />

perbellus -a -um very-beautiful<br />

perc-, perca, -perca, perci Greek the perch<br />

percn-, percno Greek dusky<br />

percol, percola Latin filter through<br />

percussus sharp-pointed?????? from Latin percussus, beating, knocking, striking<br />

perd Latin lose<br />

perd, perdic, perdix, -perdix Greek a partridge<br />

perdicarius of partridges<br />

perdit Latin lost, destroyed<br />

perdo Greek to fart loudly, from the Proto Indo-European perd, to break wind loudly, similar to Sanskrit<br />

pardate, Russian perdet, Lithuanian perdzu, Albanian pjerdh, English fart.<br />

perdurans durable, firm, of good substance.<br />

Pereant qui ante nos nostra dixerunt. Perish those who have said what we say before us. Aelius Donatus<br />

Comments on Ecclesiastes<br />

peregrin Latin wander, travel abroad<br />

peregrinans wandering abroad, in foreign parts<br />

peregrinus -a -um peregri'nus (pe-re-GREE-nus or per-eh-GRY-nus) foreign, exotic, strange; pilgrim. From<br />

classical Latin peregrīnus, adjective. coming from foreign parts, foreign, alien, exotic, concerned <strong>with</strong> foreigners or<br />

aliens, (noun) foreigner, free resident having no rights of citizenship, in post-classical Latin on a pilgrimage. Post-

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