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staminate
[stam-uh-nit, -neyt]
adjective
having a stamen or stamens.
having stamens but no pistils.
staminate
/ -ˌneɪt, ˈstæmɪnɪt /
adjective
(of plants) having stamens, esp having stamens but no carpels; male
staminate
Having stamens but no carpels. Male flowers are staminate.
Other Word Forms
- multistaminate adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of staminate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of staminate1
Example Sentences
Perigynium mostly thick and hard in texture, often scabrous or hirsute, straight-beaked; pistillate spikes compactly flowered, mostly large, erect or nearly so; staminate spikes 1 or more; stigmas 3.
A terminal combining form: Having a stamen or stamens; staminate; as, monandrous, with one stamen; polyandrous, with many stamens.
The flowers, which are of two kinds, are borne in racemes in the leaf-axils; the staminate flowers in larger numbers.
The short-stalked, bell-shaped flowers are unisexual, but staminate and pistillate are borne on the same plant; the latter are recognized by the swollen warty green ovary below the rest of the flower.
Its red-brown wood, furrowed bark and the red staminate flowers justify its name.
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