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N with malus towards none - Genesis Nursery

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Quando omni flunkus, mortati "When all else fails, play dead" Mock-Latin phrase shown embroidered on a<br />

Possum Lodge hat at the end of The Red Green Show. The motto of the Possum Lodge.<br />

quandocumque whenever, as often as<br />

quant Latin how much<br />

Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari? How much<br />

wood would a woodchuck chuck… etc.<br />

quaquaversal bending in every direction.<br />

quaquaversus to all sides<br />

quarciticus like quartz<br />

quart, quarti, quarto Latin a fourth<br />

quasi Latin nearly, almost, as though<br />

quass, quassat Latin shaking, shaken<br />

quassifolius <strong>with</strong> leaves like quassia.<br />

quatern Latin by fours<br />

quaternatus four each, in four, consisting of four.<br />

quaternellus in fours together.<br />

quaternifolius four-leaved.<br />

quaternus four-fold.<br />

quatr, quatri Latin four<br />

quebecensis from Quebec, Canada.<br />

quer, quere, queri Latin complain<br />

querc, querci, quercus, -quercus Latin the oak<br />

querc- referring to the oak<br />

quercetorum quercetor'um (kwer-seh-TORE-um) growing on oaks.<br />

quercetum oak-wood, from quercus and -etum, indicating a collective place of growth.<br />

querceus pertaining to the oak, oaken.<br />

quercifolius <strong>with</strong> leaves like Quercus, an oak<br />

quercinus of the oak, oak-like.<br />

quercoides oak-like.<br />

Quercus Quer'cus (KWER-kus) an oak, from the Classical Latin name for the English Oak, Quercus robor, from<br />

some central European language. Alternately from Greek κερχαλέος, kerkhaleos, rough in reference to its rough<br />

bark, “arbor corticis asperi”. Κερχαλέος is cut down to κερχέος, κερχοῦς, kerkheos, kerkhous. Quercus may be<br />

from κερχόεις, κεροῦς, from (like κερχαλέος), from κέρχω or κερχάω, ῶ, to render dry or rough. Or from κάχρυς,<br />

kakhrus, an acorn, a knob, as Thoephrastus reckoned it among the kakhryphora, the plants which bear acorns; from<br />

κάχρυς, kakhrus, changed to κέχρυς, κέρχυς, kekhrus, kerkhis, is quercus.<br />

quercus, -us f. oak tree; oak-leaf crown; acorns.<br />

querimbensis from Querimba or Kerimba, a chain of islands of the east coast of Africa.<br />

quern Latin of oak, oaken<br />

querneus, quernus of the Oak, Quercus, family.<br />

querquedul, quequedula, -quequedula Latin a kind of duck<br />

questu, questus Latin a complaint<br />

Qui tacet consentire viditur. Who remains silent appears to consent. (Bonifacius VIII)<br />

Quid pro quo Latin lit. what for what?; something for something<br />

quie, quiesc, quiet Latin quiet, resting<br />

quin, quin-, quina, quini, quinqu Latin five, referring to the number five<br />

quin, quina, quina, quini, quino Spanish Quina bark<br />

quinarius in fives, five-fold.<br />

quinate pinnate, said of compound leaves <strong>with</strong> five leaflets from the same point.<br />

quinatus in fives<br />

quincun, quincunc, quincunx Latin five twelfths<br />

quincunx in the form of five spots (as on dice).<br />

quindiuensis from Quindiu in Columbia.<br />

quini in five<br />

quinqu, quinque Latin five<br />

quinquangularis five-cornered.<br />

quinquecapsular five-capsuled.

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