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fabaceous
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Etymology
From Latin fabaceus, from faba (“bean”).
For sense 2, from translingual Fabaceae + -ous, from Faba.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /fəˈbeɪʃəs/
Audio (Southern England): (file) - Rhymes: -eɪʃəs
Adjective
fabaceous (comparative more fabaceous, superlative most fabaceous)
- Having the nature of a bean; like a bean.
- 1870, Shirley Hibberd, Field Flowers a Handy-book for the Rambling Botanist ..., page 78:
- The fabaceous plants rank second only to the grasses in value as ministrants to the economy of animal life, for they produce food for man and beast in vast abundance, and generally speaking, the aliments derived from this family are of the highest character in point of nourishing power, all of them contributing largely to the nourishment, not only of the muscular and bony framework, but in a peculiar degree also to the nervous system, owing to their richness in nitrogen and salts of phosphorus. In a majority of cases the fabaceous or leguminous plants have pinnated leaves, that is to say, each separate leaf consists of a series of symmetrical divisions united by a common stem.
- Belonging to the taxonomic family Fabaceae.
Translations
beanlike — see beanlike
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