| lignum rhodium | <botany> The fragrant wood of several shrubs and trees, especially of species of Rhodorhiza from the Canary Islands, and of the West Indian Amyris balsamifera. Origin: NL, fr. L. Lignum wood + Gr. A rose. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| lignum-vitae | <botany> A tree (Guaiacum officinale) found in the warm latitudes of America, from which the guaiacum of medicine is procured. Its wood is very hard and heavy, and is used for various mechanical purposes, as for the wheels of ships' blocks, cogs, bearings, and the like. See Guaiacum. In New Zealand the Metrosideros buxifolia is called lignum-vitae, and in Australia a species of Acacia. The bastard lignum-vitae is a West Indian tree (Sarcomphalus laurinus). Origin: L, wood of life; lignum wood + vita, genitive vitae, life. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
| lignum |
woody tissue
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| lignum |
Refers to the wood or the secondary thickening of the stem. This may or may not contain the bark as well.
Ãâó: www.herbalgram.org/default.asp
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| lignum | woody tissue |
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| lignum | small evergreen tree of Caribbean and southern Central America to northern South America |
| lignum | hard greenish-brown wood of the lignum vitae tree and other trees of the genus Guaiacum |
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