Search references for ELIGMOCARPUS. Phrases containing ELIGMOCARPUS
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Genus of legumes
Eligmocarpus is a genus of flowering plants in the family Fabaceae. It belongs to subfamily Dialioideae. It contains a single species, Eligmocarpus cynometroides
Eligmocarpus
Subfamily of legumes
Baudouinia Baill. Dialium L. Dicorynia Benth. Distemonanthus Benth. Eligmocarpus Capuron Kalappia Kosterm. Koompassia Maingay ex Benth. Labichea Gaudich
Dialioideae
tomentosa (possibly extinct) Dialium travancoricum Dimorphandra wilsonii Eligmocarpus cynometroides Eriosema adamaouense Erythrina perrieri Erythrina schliebenii
List of critically endangered plants
List_of_critically_endangered_plants
Ebenus L. Echinospartum (Spach) Fourr. Ecuadendron D.A.Neill Eleiotis DC. Eligmocarpus Capuron Eminia Taub. Endertia Steenis & de Wit Endosamara R.Geesink Englerodendron
List_of_Fabaceae_genera
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Girl/Female
Tamil
Rudrabhiravi | à®°à¯à®¤à¯à®°à®ªà®¿à®°à®¾à®µà¯€
Goddess Durga
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Middle English and Old French personal name Lorens, Laurence (Latin Laurentius ‘man from Laurentum’, a place in Italy probably named from its laurels or bay trees). The name was borne by a saint who was martyred at Rome in the 3rd century ad; he enjoyed a considerable cult throughout Europe, with consequent popularity of the personal name (French Laurent, Italian, Spanish Lorenzo, Catalan Llorenç, Portuguese Lourenço, German Laurenz; Polish Wawrzyniec (assimilated to the Polish word wawrzyn ‘laurel’), etc.). The surname is also borne by Jews among whom it is presumably an Americanized form of one or more like-sounding Ashkenazic surnames.
Girl/Female
Indian
Girl/Female
English
Based on the initials J. C. or an abbreviation of Jacinda.
Girl/Female
Egyptian Greek American
Black.
Girl/Female
Hindu
Little, Small
Surname or Lastname
English
English : metonymic occupational name for a grower or seller of fennel (Old English finugle, fenol, from Late Latin fenuculum). Fennel was widely used in the Middle Ages as a herb for seasoning. The surname may also have been a topographic name for someone who lived near a place where the herb grew or was grown.English : Reaney also identifies this as a derivative of Fitz Neal ‘son of Neal’, citing as an example Fennells Wood, a place name recorded in 1391 as Fenelgrove and named for a Robert FitzNeel (1283).Irish : reduced Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Fionnghail ‘descendant of Fionnghal’, a personal name composed of the elements fionn ‘fair’, ‘white’ + gal ‘valor’.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Worthy of praise, Victorious
Boy/Male
Native American
Rough; abrasive; witty.
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada
Brave as Krishna
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