n
Alternative form of abilo. [Bogo; a Philippine fruit tree, Garuga floribunda, from the family Burseraceae.]
n
Alternative form of adraces [(obsolete) A salt inflorescence on marshes.]
n
Alternative spelling of awara [(Guyana, chiefly attributively) The palm tree Astrocaryum vulgare which is native to the Amazon Rainforest region.]
n
Martes foina, a marten of Eurasia.
n
Alternative spelling of bok choy [Chinese cabbage, Brassica rapa subsp. chinensis, an East Asian leafy vegetable related to the Western cabbage.]
n
Alternative form of buck's horn plantain [A species of plantain with toothed or divided leaves (Plantago coronopus).]
n
Alternative spelling of buffalobur [Solanum rostrum]
n
Alternative form of caraipe [A Brazilian tree of the genus Caraipa; the timber of this tree]
n
Alternative form of carajura [A Brazilian plant, the cricket-vine (Fridericia chica).]
n
Alternative form of carajura [A Brazilian plant, the cricket-vine (Fridericia chica).]
n
Alternative form of carajura [A Brazilian plant, the cricket-vine (Fridericia chica).]
n
Alternative form of caranna [A hard, brittle, resinous gum, obtained from the West Indian tree Dacryodes excelsa, and formerly used in medicine.]
n
Alternative form of karanda [Carissa carandas, a species of flowering shrub in the dogbane family Apocynaceae.]
n
Alternative form of karanda [Carissa carandas, a species of flowering shrub in the dogbane family Apocynaceae.]
n
Alternative form of champac (Magnolia champaca) [A type of Asian tree with fragrant blossoms, Magnolia champaca]
n
Chinese chinkapin (Castanea henryi)
n
Alternative form of chiretta [A kind of felwort, Swertia chirata (syn. Agathotes chirayta), found in northern India, esteemed as a tonic and febrifuge.]
n
Alternative form of christophine [chayote]
n
(Jamaica) the Jamaican coney (Geocapromys brownii), a hutia endemic to Jamaica
n
The tree Dipteryx odorata, which bears the tonka bean.
n
Alternative form of carajura [A Brazilian plant, the cricket-vine (Fridericia chica).]
n
Alternative form of crucian (“kind of carp”) [A small greenish-brown carp, Carassius carassius, farmed in parts of Europe.]
n
Alternative form of deodar [Cedrus deodara, a type of cedar tree native to the western Himalayas.]
v
simple past tense of do gooseberry
n
(uncountable) A West African food made from the almond-like seeds of Irvingia gabonensis.
n
Alternative form of gampi [Wikstroemia albiflora (miyama ganpi).]
n
Alternative form of geebung [A plant of the genus Persoonia.]
n
(Australia) A type of long spear, especially in Western Australia.
n
Alternative form of guayabi [A large, frond-bearing South American tree, Cordia americana, or its valuable wood.]
n
Alternative form of gurjun [A major commercial timber species in the genus Dipterocarpus.]
n
Alternative spelling of guarri [(South Africa) A shrub or tree, Euclea divinorum; its fruit can be fermented to produce vinegar.]
n
A South American motmot.
n
Alternative form of iluppai [Synonym of mahua (“Indian tree”)]
n
Alternative form of kadupul [(chiefly attributive) Epiphyllum strictum or Epiphyllum selenicereus, a flower that blooms at night, believed to have an association with the nāga world.]
n
Alternative form of kamala (“dyestuff”) [Nelumbo nucifera, a lotus plant.]
n
Alternative form of kaniwa [A species of goosefoot, Chenopodium pallidicaule, similar in character and uses to the closely related quinoa.]
n
The fibre obtained from this plant, similar to jute.
n
Alternative form of kiwikiwi [Blechnum fluviatile, the star fern or creek fern.]
n
Alternative form of klinki pine [Araucaria hunsteinii, a very large fast-growing evergreen tree native to Papua New Guinea.]
n
(South Africa) A small hill or mound (especially on the African veld).
n
Alternative form of coosumba [(India, obsolete) safflower]
n
Alternative form of lebbek [The tree Albizia lebbeck.]
n
Ledebouria socialis, a species native to South Africa.
n
Alternative form of mangkono [The tree Xanthostemon verdugonianus.]
n
Alternative form of marula [A medium-sized dioecious tree, Sclerocarya birrea, indigenous to Southern Africa and West Africa.]
n
Alternative spelling of monkey puzzle [A large coniferous tree, Araucaria araucana, native to Chile.]
n
Alternative form of mudar (“plant”) [Calotropis gigantea (crown flower, giant milkweed)]
n
Alternative form of noog (“Guizotia abyssinica”) [Synonym of niger (“Guizotia abyssinica”)]
n
Alternative form of kupukupu [(Hawaii) The fern Nephrolepis exaltata.]
n
Myadestes lanaiensis, a small, dark solitaire endemic to parts of the Hawaiian Islands.
n
Alternative form of wourali [(dated) curare]
n
Alternative form of wourali [(dated) curare]
n
(Hawaii) A local common name for Astelia waialealae.
n
Alternative spelling of palm tree [A tree of the family Arecaceae usually characterised by having a single stem or trunk, directly from which sprout several leaves or fronds giving a shape like an outstretched hand.]
n
Alternative form of karengo [(New Zealand) Pyropia columbina, an edible seaweed.]
n
Alternative form of pawpaw, grandfather. [Asimina, a genus of trees and shrubs native to eastern North America, especially common pawpaw (Asimina triloba)]
n
Alternative spelling of peewah [The peach palm (Bactris gasipaes), a South American palm tree.]
n
Alternative form of peepaw, synonym of pawpaw [(US, dialect, Southern US) Synonym of pawpaw (“grandfather”)]
n
Alternative spelling of peewah [The peach palm (Bactris gasipaes), a South American palm tree.]
n
(Australia, colloquial, derogatory, obsolete) A person of British descent, especially one who has (recently) immigrated to Australia; a pom, a pommy.
n
Alternative form of pyinkado [Burmese ironwood, Xylia xylocarpa]
n
The bunny cactus (Opuntia microdasys), which has erect, flat branches covered prominently with bristles.
n
Obsolete form of rambutan. [A tree, Nephelium lappaceum, of Southeast Asia.]
n
Alternative form of sakhua (“sal tree”) [sal tree (Shorea robusta)]
n
Alternative form of souari [Any tree of the genus Caryocar. They yield strong timber and some bear edible nuts.]
n
Alternative form of sarsaparilla [Any of various tropical (Central and South) American vines of the genus Smilax, such as Smilax aspera, which have fragrant roots.]
n
Alternative form of souari [Any tree of the genus Caryocar. They yield strong timber and some bear edible nuts.]
n
Alternative spelling of chadon beni [(Caribbean) Culantro (Eryngium foetidum), a tropical herb whose leaves are used medicinally and in Caribbean cuisine.]
n
(India) The water caltrop.
n
Alternative form of sirih (“plant”) [A vining plant of Sumatra, whose leaves may be chewed with betel nuts or used medicinally to shrink the vagina after childbirth.]
n
Alternative form of shola (“the plant Aeschynomene aspera”) [A wild plant found in Bengal and Assam, Aeschynomene aspera, having a milky-white, spongy pith used for the manufacture of pith helmets and decorative artefacts.]
n
Alternative spelling of saj [An Asian tree, Terminalia elliptica]
n
The flesh of octopus as used in sushi.
n
Alternative form of tania (“new cocoyam or taro”) [(rare) New cocoyam, yautia (Xanthosoma sagittifolium).]
n
Alternative form of uluhe (“kind of fern”) [(Hawaii) The fern Dicranopteris linearis.]
n
(Australia) A red ochre used as a pigment by Aborigines
n
Alternative spelling of yagona [(chiefly in the Pacific islands) The kava plant.]
n
Alternative form of igapó [A blackwater-flooded Amazonian forest.]
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