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HAMAMELID DICOT GENUS
Pronunciation (US): | (GB): |
I. (noun)
Sense 1
Meaning:
Genus of mostly woody relatively primitive dicotyledonous flowering plants with flowers often unisexual and often borne in catkins
Classified under:
Hypernyms ("hamamelid dicot genus" is a kind of...):
dicot genus; magnoliopsid genus (genus of flowering plants having two cotyledons (embryonic leaves) in the seed which usually appear at germination)
Hyponyms (each of the following is a kind of "hamamelid dicot genus"):
Fagus; genus Fagus (beeches)
Castanea; genus Castanea (chestnuts; chinkapins)
Castanopsis; genus Castanopsis (evergreen trees and shrubs of warm regions valued for their foliage; southeastern United States and eastern Australia and northern New Zealand)
Chrysolepis; genus Chrysolepis (two species: golden chinkapins)
genus Lithocarpus; Lithocarpus (tanbark oaks)
genus Nothofagus; Nothofagus (beeches of temperate southern hemisphere except Africa: southern beech)
genus Quercus; Quercus (oaks)
Betula; genus Betula (a genus of trees of the family Betulaceae (such as birches))
Alnus; genus Alnus (alders)
Carpinus; genus Carpinus (mostly deciduous monoecious trees or shrubs: hornbeams; sometimes placed in subfamily Carpinaceae)
genus Ostrya; Ostrya (deciduous monoecious trees of Europe and Asia and America; sometimes placed in subfamily or family Carpinaceae)
genus Ostryopsis; Ostryopsis (deciduous monoecious shrubs of China and Mongolia resembling trees of the genus Ostrya; sometimes placed in subfamily or family Carpinaceae)
Corylus; genus Corylus (deciduous monoecious nut-bearing shrubs of small trees: hazel; sometimes placed in the subfamily or family Corylaceae)
genus Salix; Salix (a large and widespread genus varying in size from small shrubs to large trees: willows)
genus Populus; Populus (a genus of trees of the family Salicaceae that is found in the northern hemisphere; poplars)
Holonyms ("hamamelid dicot genus" is a member of...):
Hamamelidae; subclass Hamamelidae (a group of chiefly woody plants considered among the most primitive of angiosperms; perianth poorly developed or lacking; flowers often unisexual and often in catkins and often wind pollinated; contains 23 families including the Betulaceae and Fagaceae (includes the Amentiferae); sometimes classified as a superorder)