10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «AMARANTACEOUS»
Discover the use of
amarantaceous in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
amarantaceous and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Dictionary of the Economic Products of India: Abaca to Buxus
Amarantaceous Herbs. AMARANTACEiE larly, rarely a berry. Seeds usually
compressed, reniform, testa crusta- ceous, black, shining; hilum naked or early
arillate, albumen abundant. Embryo peripheric, anular or curved ; cotyledons ...
Sir George Watt, Edgar Thurston, T. N. Mukharji, 1899
2
A Dictionary of the Economic Products of India
Amarantaceous Herbs. AMARANTACEiE. larly, rarely a berry. Seeds usually
compressed, reniform, testa crusta- ceous, black, shining; hilum naked or early
arillate, albumen abundant. Embryo peripheric, annular or curved ; cotyledons ...
3
A Dictionary of the Economic Products of India
Amarantaceous Herbs. AMARANTACEAE. lady, rarely a berry. Seeds usually
compressed, reniform, testa crustaceous, black, shining; hilum naked or early
arillate, albumen abundant. Embryo peripheric, annular or curved ; cotyledons ...
4
The Century dictionary and cyclopedia: a work of universal ...
The Alternanthera Achyrantha, a prostrate amarantaceous weed of warm
countries. It is said to have diuretic properties. fortynet, n. An obsolete form of
fortune. forty-niner (f6r'ti-ni'ner), n. One of the adventurers, chiefly from the United
States, ...
William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin Eli Smith, 1906
5
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia: Dictionary
[NL., fem. pi. of amarantaceus : see amarantaceous.] A natural order of apetalous
herbaceous weedy plants, with inconspicuous, mostly scarious- bracted, flowers.
They are of little or no value, though some species are cultivated on account of ...
William Dwight Whitney, 1906
[NL., fern. pi. of amarantuceus : see amarantaceous.] A natural order of apetalous
herbaceous weedy plants, with inconspicuous, mostlv scarious- bracted, flowers.
They are of little or no value, though some species are cultivated on account of ...
7
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia: The Century ...
Same as amarantaceous. amaranth-feathers (am'a-ranth-fe<Pi1'erz), n. A name
given to Humea elcgans, an Australian com osite plant, with drooping panicles of
sma reddish flowers. It is sometimes cultigamate, v.] 1. The act or operation of ...
William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin Eli Smith, 1911
The estimation of carbohydrates for different hosts and parts of leaves (
inflorescence and leaves) of amarantaceous plants revealed that the
inflorescence had higher amount of carbohydrates than the leaves, excepting for
the host A. aspera, ...
... Australia, and that the larvie were sometimes destructive to salt-brush hedges.
Two years later (1909) Mr. O. H. Swezey (7) stated that the larva was fed on
Euxolus, portu- laca, garden beet, coxcomb, other amarantaceous plants, and on
...
United States. Bureau of Entomology, 1916
10
Transactions of the New York Academy of Sciences
... flats are densely covered with a half-shrubby growth — through which travel is
nearly impossible—of Dicorea Brandegei, Gray; Oxytcsnia acerosa, Nutt., and
many species of Atriplex and other Chenopodiaceous and Amarantaceous plants
.