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N with malus towards none - Genesis Nursery

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ut-, ruta, -ruta Latin a rue; disagreeableness<br />

rut- referring to the color red, from rutilus, red, golden, auburn<br />

Ruta, ruta, rutae, f. rue, Ruta graveolens, from Greek?, Celsus, Cicero. (Rutaceae)<br />

ruta-muraria Spleen-wort, or White Maidenhair.<br />

Rutaceae Ruta'ceae (roo-TAY-see-ee) plants of the Ruta, Rue, family, from the genus name, Ruta, and -aceae,<br />

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

rutaceus, -ius of rue.<br />

rutatus -a -um adjective flavoured <strong>with</strong> rue, from Martial.<br />

ruthen- (N) a province in Russia<br />

ruthenicus Ruthenian, from the inhabitants of northern Hungaria, Zakarpatska, region of Russia, in the<br />

western Ukraine south of the Carpathian Mountains. A part of Hungary before 1918 & 1939-45), a province of<br />

Czechoslovakia from 1918-38. More generally used to mean Russian.<br />

ruti Greek a wrinkle<br />

rutidobulbon rough-bulbed????<br />

rutidolepis <strong>with</strong> lozenge-shaped scales, from and Greek λεπίς, λεπιδο-, lepis, lepido-, scale.<br />

rutifolius ruta-leaved, <strong>with</strong> leaves like Rue, from Latin ruta, the herb rue, bitterness, unpleasantness<br />

rutil Latin red<br />

rutilans red, becoming red, from rutilo, to shine reddish, from Latin rutilo -are intransitive verb, to shine<br />

reddish; transitive verb to make red.<br />

rutilus glowing, reddish-yellow, used for plants <strong>with</strong> glowing red, orange, or yellow flowers, from Latin<br />

rutilus -a -um, red , golden, auburn.<br />

rydbergii ryd'bergii (RID-berg-ee-eye) in honor of Per Axel Rydberg (1860-1931), a member of the New York<br />

Botanical Gardens in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, who wrote the first book on the flora of the Rockies<br />

from Canada to Mexico, and several other floras<br />

rutr, rutrum, -rutrum Latin a spade, shovel, from rutrum -i n., a spade , shovel.<br />

rynch, ryncho, rynchus, -rynchus Greek a beak, snout<br />

rypaloglossus spotted??, from , and γλωσσος, glôssos, tongue.<br />

rytidocarpus bearing fruit <strong>with</strong> a wrinkled surface.<br />

rytidophyllus <strong>with</strong> grooved leaves.<br />

''civilization is a transient sickness.'' Robinson Jeffers<br />

sa, sao Greek Healthy, safe<br />

sab, sabell, sabul, saburr Latin and<br />

Sabal derivation of name unknown<br />

Sabatia, also Sabbatia New Latin, from Liberatus Sabbati, 18th century Italian botanist, and New Latin –ia.<br />

(Gentianaceae)<br />

sabatius from Savona, on the Ligurian coast of north-west Italy<br />

sabaudus from Savoy, west of the Alps.<br />

sabinianus -a -um sabinia'nus (sa-bin-ee-AY-nus)<br />

sabinoides resembling Common Savin (Juniperus Sabina).<br />

sabulonus -a -um sabulo'nus (sab-yoo-LO-nus) sandy, of, from, or relating to sand, from Latin sabulum, sabuli,<br />

n., gravel, sand.<br />

sabulosus growing in sandy places, from Latin sabulum -i n., gravel, sand.<br />

sac, saco, sacus, -sacus Greek a shield<br />

sacc, sacc-, sacci, sacco, saccous Latin a sack, referring to a bag, from saccus, a sack, bag or a purse<br />

saccadorus sack, bag-like.<br />

saccatus saccate, bag-like, <strong>with</strong> sacs, from New Latin saccatus, from Latin saccus. Date: 1830<br />

sacchar, sacchar-, saccharo Greek sugar, referring to sugar , from Latin saccharum, from Greek sakkharon,<br />

from Pali sakkharā, from Sanskrit sarkarā gravel, grit, sugar. Pali is an Indic language found in the Buddhist<br />

canon and used today as the liturgical and scholarly language of Hinayana Buddhism.<br />

saccharatus -a -um containing sugar, sugary, <strong>with</strong> sweet taste, sugar yielding.<br />

sachariferus, saccharifera sugar-bearing<br />

sacchariflorus from and flos, floris, flower.<br />

saccharinum, saccharini n. Latin noun, saccharin, implying sugary or resembling sugar. Possibly from<br />

Medieval Latin, or from Greek σάκχαρον, σάκχαρ(ι), sakkharon, sakkhar(i), sugar, and -inus -a -um, -īnus

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