(isim) akçaağaç tohumu

listen to the pronunciation of (isim) akçaağaç tohumu
Turkish - English
samara
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
The winged indehiscent fruit of trees such as the ash, elm or maple
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
(isim) akçaağaç tohumu
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