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N with malus towards none - Genesis Nursery

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thaler--, thalero Greek fresh, blooming<br />

thalia, -thalia Greek mythology bloom; joy. From Thalia, the Greek Muse of comedy<br />

Thalia for Johann Thal, German physician and botanist who lived during the mid 1500s<br />

thaliana thalia'na (thay-lee-AY-na)<br />

thalictrifolius <strong>with</strong> leaves like Meadow Rue, Thalictrum.<br />

thalictroides thalictrum-like, resembling Thalictrum, from Thalictrum-oides.<br />

Thalictrum Thalic'trum (tha-LIK-trum) from New Latin, from Latin, thalictrum, (from Pliny) meadow rue, from<br />

Greek θὰλικτρον, thaliktron, a name used by Dioscorides for another plant <strong>with</strong> divided leaves, from θαλλω, thallo,<br />

to grow green, to be green. Dioscorides, the Greek physician and pharmacologist wrote the Materia Medica, which<br />

remained a leading pharmacological text for 16 centuries. (Ranunculaceae)<br />

thall, thallo, thallus, -thallus Greek a young shoot, twig<br />

thallinus pertaining to a thallus or sprout.<br />

thallodes pertaining to a thallus or sprout.<br />

thalloides having the nature or form of a thallus or sprout.<br />

thalo Greek a twig; a young person<br />

thalp, thalpo Greek heat<br />

thalycr, thalycro Greek hot, glowing<br />

thamb, thambo, thambus, -thambus Greek astonishment<br />

thamn, -thamn(...), thamno, thamnus, -thamnus Greek a shrub, referring to a plant, a bush, from θάµνος,<br />

thamnos, shrub.<br />

thamnium modern Latin from Greek θαµνίον, thamnion, diminutive of θάµνος, thamnos, shrub.<br />

thamnoides shrub, tree-like, or brushy.<br />

Thamnosma Thamnos'ma (tham-NOS-ma)<br />

thana-, thanas-, thanato-, thanatus, -thanatus Greek death, from θάνατος, thanatos, death.<br />

thapsia, -thapsia Greek a poisonous plant<br />

thapsiformis resembling Aaron’s Rod, Verbascum thaspus.<br />

thapsin-, thapso- Greek yellow<br />

thapsoides thapsus-like, mullein-like, resembling Aaron’s Rod, Verbascum thaspus.<br />

Thapsus, thapsus thap'sus (THAP-sus) from Thapsos, the former name of a town in Sicily, also referenced as a<br />

town in Greece, as Sicily was part of Magna Graecia, Latin for Greater (or simply Great) Greece, or Megalê Hellas<br />

Μεγάλη Ἑλλάς. Thapsos is a Middle Bronze Age site near Syracuse. Also referenced as Thapsus in ancient<br />

Africa, now Tunisia. From the Island of Thapsos, an old generic name θαψος, thapsos, for Cotinus coggygria,<br />

Thapsus(os) was a North African town and the site of a victory by Caesar.<br />

thapt, thapto Greek bury<br />

Thaspium New Latin, irregular from Thapsia, from Latin, a poisonous plant of the ancient allied genus<br />

Thaspia, from Greek, from Thapsi, an island, or Thapsos, town and peninsula in Sicily, now Magnisi,<br />

especially the Deadly Carrot, Thapsia garganica. (Umbelliferae)<br />

thauma, -thauma, thaumasi, thaumast, thamasto Greek a wonder; wonderful<br />

the-, thea, -thea Greek: a view, spectacle; Latin tea<br />

the-, thei, -thei Greek: a god; Latin: tea<br />

the-, theo Greek run; a god<br />

theat, theatr Greek an audience; a theatre<br />

thebacius of Thebes; alternately from Theben in Hungary.<br />

thec-, theca, -theca, theco Greek a case, box, chest, cup, a spuranium or capsule.<br />

-thec(...) referring to a sheath<br />

theciformis in the form of a case, shell, or sac, from theca, a case, a spuranium or capsule.<br />

thect, thecto Greek sharpened<br />

theezans tea-yielding.<br />

theg, thego Greek sharpen<br />

thei Greek: run; a god; Latin: tea<br />

thei, theio Greek sulphur<br />

theiacanthus <strong>with</strong> sulfur-yellow thorns, from Greek and ακανθος, akanthos, spiny, thorny..<br />

theifera tea-bearing<br />

theiogalus having sulfur-yellow sap.<br />

thel-, thela, -thela, theli Greek a nipple<br />

thel-, thely Greek female; tender

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