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N with malus towards none - Genesis Nursery

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tam so<br />

Tam exanimis quam tunica nehru fio. I am as dead as the nehru jacket.<br />

Tamaricaceae Tamarica'ceae (tam-ar-i-KAY-see-ee) plants of the Tamarind-Tree family, from the genus name,<br />

Tamarindus, and -aceae, the standardized Latin suffix of plant family names.<br />

Támarin from Greek τάµαριν, tamarind.<br />

tamarinda tamarind from Chiron.<br />

tamarindifolius <strong>with</strong> leaves like the Tamarind-Tree.<br />

tamarindiformis resembling the Tamarind-Tree.<br />

tamariscifolius, tamariscifolia <strong>with</strong> leaves like Tamarix, tamarisk<br />

tamarisciformis resembling Tamarix, Common tamarisk.<br />

tamariscinus, tamariscina like or resembling tamarisk.<br />

Tamarix Tam'arix (TAM-ar-ix)<br />

Tamaulipa referring to the Tamaulipan Desert region, to which the species is restricted<br />

tamen not<strong>with</strong>standing, nevertheless<br />

tamia, tamias, -tamias Greek a distributor<br />

tamnifolia<br />

tamnoides, tamoides resembling Tamus, Black Bryony, a yam relative.<br />

tampicanus -a -um from Tampico, coastal northeast Mexico. “Let’s go down to Tampico, lay on the beach<br />

all winter long.” Henry Holyoak Lightcap in Fool’s Progress, Edward Abbey 1988. Alternately, Tampico,<br />

Illinois, the cultural center of the Winnebago Swamp, birthplace of Ronald Rayguns.<br />

tamquam as much as, as if<br />

Tamus New Latin, probably from Latin tamnus, a vine<br />

tana, tano Greek stretched<br />

tanacet-, tanacetum, tanaceum Old French the tansy<br />

tanacetifolius -a -um tanacetifo'lius (tan-a-set-i-FO-lee-us) tansy-leaved, <strong>with</strong> leaves like Tanacetum, tansy.<br />

Tanacetum Tanace'tum (tan-a-SEE-tuum) New Latin, from Medieval Latin, athanasia, tansy, derivation<br />

unknown, but likely from Greek ἀθανασία, athanasia, deathless, immortality, through Medieval Latin tanazita,<br />

tanasia. The Greek and Latin names are references to the long persistence of the durable flowers, as though they<br />

were immortal. (Compositae)<br />

tanacipam; also: tanacitam wormwood<br />

tanagr- Brazilian a tanager<br />

tanidila catmint, from Dacian.<br />

tang-, tangi Latin touch<br />

tanguticus, tangutica from the region of the Tangut (Tangusian) people in north-west China, eastern Siberia.<br />

tann-, tannum, -tannum Middle Latin tanning<br />

tannensis from Tanna, an island of the New Hebrides, in the Pacific Ocean.<br />

tanium wormwood.<br />

tantum only, merely<br />

tany, tanyo Greek stretch, stretched<br />

tao, taon, taos, -taos Greek a peacock<br />

tape, tapes, -tapes, tapesto Greek a carpet<br />

tapein, tapeino Greek low<br />

taph, tapho, taphr Greek a burial; astonishment<br />

taphr, taphro, -taphrus, -taphrus Greek a trench<br />

tapin, tapino Greek low<br />

tapir, tapiro Spanish a tapir<br />

tarac, tarach, taract Greek disorder; disturb<br />

taragma, taragma, taragmato Greek trouble, uneasiness<br />

Táragkon, Tarchōn from Greek τάραγκον, ταρχων, tarragon.<br />

tarand, tarandus, -tarandus Greek the reindeer<br />

tarant Italian a town in Italy<br />

taraxi, taraxis, -taraxis Greek: confusion, trouble; Arabic: a kind of succory, one of various European<br />

composites, such as Catananche, Chondrilla, or Arnoseris.<br />

taraxicifolius dandelion-leaved, <strong>with</strong> leaves like Taraxacum, Dandelion.<br />

taraxacoides resembling Dandelion.

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