samara

listen to the pronunciation of samara
Englisch - Türkisch
(isim) akçaağaç tohumu
{i} akçaağaç tohumu
Englisch - Englisch
A city in Russia, the sixth-largest in the country by population
The winged indehiscent fruit of trees such as the ash, elm or maple
formerly (1935-91) Kuybyshev City (pop., 2001 est.: 1,146,400) and river port, eastern Russia. Located on the left bank of the Volga River where the Samara River joins the Volga, it was founded in 1586 as a fortress protecting the Volga trade route. It was the scene of the rebellion of Yemelyan Pugachov against Catherine II in 1773-74. It later became a major trade centre. Its growth was stimulated during World War II by the relocation there of numerous government functions when Moscow was threatened by German attack. It is highly industrialized and is the centre of a network of pipelines. Oil and petrochemicals are the major industries
Key; a dry, one-seeded, indehiscent or persistently closed winged fruit
{i} dry one-seeded fruit that does not split open when ripe
dry fruit with one or two flat wings attached to a seed (as on elms and maples)
A type of dried fruit that has a seed attached to a wing, which often causes the fruit to spin downward when it falls from a tree Most Maples have paired samaras in clusters, while most Ashes and Tree-of-Heaven have single samaras in large clusters
A dry, indehiscent, usually one-seeded, winged fruit, as that of the ash, maple, and elm; a key or key fruit
a winged often one-seed indehiscent fruit as of the ash or elm or maple
winged fruit which are dispersed by wind, found on trees such as maples
A dry fruit composed of a seed with a papery wing attached Examples: Maple, Ash, Elm
A dry, usually one seeded, winged fruit, like that of an Elm, Ash, or Maple etc
A simple dry single-seeded fruit with the pericarp extended into a wing which aids in dispersal
A dry, 1-seeded, winged fruit, such as that of the maples
A dry, indehiscent, winged fruit, one-seeded (like Fraxinus and Ulmus) or two-seeded (like Acer)
an indehiscent winged fruit (commonly found in maple and ash)
A winged fruit that does not split spontaneously (e g , maple)
The botanical term for a winged seed, as in that of the maples
A kind of fruit Thin "wings" are attached to the seed Maples have "helicopters", the most commonly known samara However, ashes and elms also have samaras [To return to previous page, click your browser's BACK button then scroll through the page to your last location]
A dry fruit that does not split open and has part of the fruit wall extended to form a flattened membrane or wing
a dry, winged, one-seeded fruit Also known as key fruit
Dry, one-seeded fruit with a membranous wing
A samara
key fruit
samaras
plural of samara
samara
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