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Definition of Genus arundinaria
1. Noun. North American bamboo.
Generic synonyms: Liliopsid Genus, Monocot Genus
Group relationships: Bambuseae, Tribe Bambuseae
Member holonyms: Arundinaria Gigantea, Cane Reed, Giant Cane, Arundinaria Tecta, Small Cane, Switch Cane
Derivative terms: Arundinaceous
Lexicographical Neighbors of Genus Arundinaria
Literary usage of Genus arundinaria
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Indian Forester (1888)
"AC NOTES ON THE SMALL BAMBOOS OF THE genus arundinaria. OF the genus Arundinaria,
which includes, according to the " Genera Plantarum," also ..."
2. Annals and Magazine of Natural History by William Jardine (1853)
"... which it reaches in the Himalaya, and from its affinity and resemblance to
the tropical genus Bambusa; I allude to the genus Arundinaria of the section ..."
3. Transactions of the Botanical Society by Botanical Society of Edinburgh (1850)
"... which it reaches in the Himalaya, and from its affinity and resemblance to
the tropical genus Bambusa; I allude to the genus Arundinaria of the section ..."
4. The Bamboo Garden by Alfred Parsons (1896)
"... most of its genus, ARUNDINARIA SIMONI has a round stem, tapering off and
slightly flattened at the apex, but less so than is the case in many of the ..."
5. Supplement to Encyclopædia Britannica (ninth Edition): A Dictionary of Arts (1891)
"... th6 United States, and not '• very distantly related to the celebrated bamboo
of the Asiatic lands. These canes constitute the genus Arundinaria, which, ..."
6. Medical Botany; Or, Illustrations and Descriptions of the Medicinal Plants ...by John Stephenson, James Morss Churchill, Gilbert Thomas Burnett by John Stephenson, James Morss Churchill, Gilbert Thomas Burnett (1834)
"... such as the wild Arundo sagittata, or some species of the genus Arundinaria—all
of which are common on the banks of rivers in these latitudes, and all, ..."
7. Botanical Miscellany: Containing Figures and Descriptions of Such Plants as by William Jackson Hooker (1830)
"... such as the wild cane, (Arundo sagittata,) or some species of the genus
Arundinaria—all of which are common on the banks of rivers in these latitudes, ..."