botani

listen to the pronunciation of botani
English - Turkish

Definition of botani in English Turkish dictionary

botany
bitki bilim
botany
{i} bitkibilim
botany
{i} botanik

Ben her zaman botanikle ilgilendim. - I've always been interested in botany.

Bir erkeğin elinde bir demet çiçek varsa, bu onun botanik çalışmayacağı, fakat anatomi çalışacağı anlamına gelir. - If a guy has got a bunch of flowers in his hand, it means that he is going to practise not botany, but anatomy.

botany
(Tıp) Bitkileri konu alan bilim dalı, bitkiler bilgisi, botanik
botany
botanik bitkibilimi
botany
nebatat
English - English

Definition of botani in English English dictionary

botany
The plant life, or the properties and life phenomena exhibited by a plant, plant type, or plant group
botany
A botanical treatise or study, especially of a particular system of botany or that of a particular place
botany
the science that treats of plants
botany
{n} the knowledge or description of plants
botany
Florida Nature
botany
the branch of biology that studies plants
botany
the study of plant life, its structure and function
botany
{i} branch of biology dealing with plant life
botany
The study of plants botan = grass, pasture
botany
The study of plants
botany
[n] the study of plants
botany
The science which treats of the structure of plants, the functions of their parts, their places of growth, their classification, and the terms which are employed in their description and denomination
botany
The scientific study of plants, a branch of biology. Typically those disciplines that involve the whole plant
botany
A book which treats of the science of botany
botany
Botany is the scientific study of plants. the scientific study of plants (botanical). Branch of biology that deals with plants, including the study of the structure, properties, and biochemical processes of all forms of plant life, as well as plant classification, plant diseases, and the interactions of plants with their physical environment. The science of botany traces back to the ancient Greco-Roman world but received its modern impetus in Europe in the 16th century, mainly through the work of physicians and herbalists, who began to observe plants seriously to identify those useful in medicine. Today the principal branches of botanical study are morphology, physiology, ecology, and systematics (the identification and ranking of all plants). Subdisciplines include bryology (the study of mosses and liverworts), pteridology (the study of ferns and their relatives), paleobotany (the study of fossil plants), and palynology (the study of modern and fossil pollen and spores). See also forestry, horticulture