Definition of Family loganiaceae

1. Noun. A dicotyledonous family of plants of order Gentianales.


Lexicographical Neighbors of Family Loganiaceae

family Leptodactylidae
family Leptotyphlopidae
family Liliaceae
family Limacidae
family Limulidae
family Linaceae
family Liopelmidae
family Liparidae
family Liparididae
family Lithodidae
family Littorinidae
family Loasaceae
family Lobeliaceae
family Lobotidae
family Locustidae
family Loganiaceae
family Lomariopsidaceae
family Lophiidae
family Lophosoriaceae
family Loranthaceae
family Lorisidae
family Loxomataceae
family Lucanidae
family Lutjanidae
family Luvaridae
family Lycaenidae
family Lycoperdaceae
family Lycopodiaceae
family Lycosidae
family Lygaeidae

Literary usage of Family loganiaceae

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Indigenous Trees of the Hawaiian Islands by Joseph Francis Charles Rock (1913)
"The family Loganiaceae, with its 31 genera and more than 370 species, is decidedly tropical; only few representatives are found outside the tropics, ..."

2. The Plant World by Plant World Association, Wild Flower Preservation Society (U.S.), Wild Flower Preservation Society of America (1902)
"... air come and lodge in the branches thereof." As the fruit is pungent and mustard-like, there seems be some ground for the belief. family loganiaceae. ..."

3. Bulletin by United States Bureau of Plant Industry (1905)
"... family Loganiaceae ]. Gelsemium; yellow jasmine; Carolina jasmine; wild woodbine. Twining, shrubby perennial, native, growing on low ground in woods ami ..."

4. A Text-book of Botany by Eduard Strasburger (1898)
"OFFICINAL.—OLEI-M OLIVAE (vide supra) ; MANNA, the dried sap of the Manna- Ash, Fraxinus Ornus (Mediterranean). family loganiaceae. — Flowers always with a ..."

5. American Observer Medical Monthly (1880)
"Botany: Hoang-Nan, "Tropical Bindweed," met with on the moun- ntains between Anam and Tonquin. Family, Loganiaceae. Named by Pierre, Strychnos ..."

6. Ginseng and Other Medicinal Plants: A Book of Valuable Information for by Arthur Robert Harding (1908)
"... family (Loganiaceae), which number.' among its members such powerful poisonous agents as the strychnine-producing tree. DESCRIPTION OF ROOTSTOCK — The ..."

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