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N with malus towards none - Genesis Nursery

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squamarius being furnished <strong>with</strong> scales.<br />

squamatus -a -um squama'tus (skwam-AH-tus or skwam-AY-tus) squamate, scaly, being furnished <strong>with</strong> scales,<br />

<strong>with</strong> small scale-like leaves or bracts<br />

squamelliformis shaped like a scale.<br />

squameus being furnished <strong>with</strong> scales, from Latin squameus -a -um, scaly.<br />

squamiferus bearing scales.<br />

squamiformis shaped like a scale.<br />

squamigerus, squamigera bearing scales<br />

squamipes <strong>with</strong> a scaly stalk.<br />

squamisetus <strong>with</strong> bristly scales.<br />

squamosus full of scales, scaly, beset <strong>with</strong> scales, scale-like.<br />

squamulatus bearing small scales.<br />

squamulosus beset <strong>with</strong> small scales.<br />

squarr- spreading, <strong>with</strong> scales standing out at right angles or greater, from Latin L. squarrōs-us (rare),<br />

scurfy, scabby<br />

squarros- Latin scaly, rough, the combining form.<br />

Squarrosa, squarrosus -a -um Squarro'sa (skwa-RO-sa) squarro'sus (skwa-RO-sus) rough, somewhat rough,<br />

scurfy, <strong>with</strong> protruding scales, <strong>with</strong> leaves spreading at right angles, <strong>with</strong> parts spreading horizontally, or even<br />

recurved at the ends, from Latin squarrosus, rough, scurfy<br />

squarrulosus somewhat rough or scaly, diminutive of squarrose.<br />

squatarola, squatarola Italian the black-bellied plover<br />

squatin-, squatina Latin a skate<br />

squill-, squilla, -squilla, squilli Latin a sea onion; a shrimp<br />

stabil-, stabili Latin firm<br />

stach-, stachys, -stachys Greek a spike, ear of corn<br />

-stachy(...) referring to a spike of flowers<br />

stachyerus spike-like.<br />

stachyoides stachys-like, resembling Wound-wort, Stachys.<br />

stachyophorus bearing spikes.<br />

Stachys Sta'chys (STAY-kiss) Greek stachys a spike, <strong>with</strong> spikes, an ear of grain, base horehound; used in<br />

compound words; alternately Latin stachys from Pliny, from Greek στάχυς, stakhys, from Dioscorides, a transferred<br />

use of στάχυς, stakhys, ear of grain or corn. (Labiteae or Lamiaceae)<br />

stachyurus from Greek stakhys, spike, and oura, tail<br />

stact-, stacto Greek trickling<br />

stag-, stageto, stagma, -stagma, stagmat-, stagmo- Greek a drop<br />

stagn, stagna, stagni, stagnum, -stagnum Latin motionless; a pool<br />

stagnalis growing in stagnant water.<br />

stagnensis growing in stagnant water.<br />

stagninus standing erect, upright.<br />

stala, stalact-, stalagm- Greek dripping, dropping<br />

-stalsis Greek a constriction, compression<br />

stalt Greek constriction, compression<br />

stam, stamen, -stamen, stamin Plural stamens or stamina Latin anything standing upright; a thread; a<br />

stamen, from Latin L. stāmen, neuter, plural. stāmina ‘the warp in the upright loom of the ancients’ (Lewis &<br />

Short), a thread of the warp, a thread or fibre in general, also (Pliny) applied to the stamens of the lily;<br />

corresponding formally to Greek στήµων masc. warp, οτῆµα, neut., some part of a plant (Hesychius), Goth.<br />

stōma wk. masc., Skanskrit sthāman station, place, also strength:_Indo-germanic *st(h)āmon-, -en-, from<br />

*st(h)āto stand.<br />

stamineus bearing prominent stamens, stamen-like, stamen from Latin, warp, thread, thread spun by the fates<br />

at one's birth to determine the length of his life, stamen; akin to Greek stēmōn warp, thread, akin to Old Irish<br />

sessam act of standing, Sanskrit sthāman station, Greek histanai to cause to stand; basic meaning: standing<br />

upright. (OED)<br />

staminiformis in the form of stamens.<br />

stamn-, stamno Greek a wine jar<br />

standishii after John Standish (1814-1875), British nurseryman, founder of Sunningdale Nurseries, in<br />

Berkshire, UK

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