English Dictionary |
ORDER CONIFERALES
Pronunciation (US): | (GB): |
Dictionary entry overview: What does order Coniferales mean?
• ORDER CONIFERALES (noun)
The noun ORDER CONIFERALES has 1 sense:
1. profusely branching and chiefly evergreen trees and some shrubs having narrow or needlelike leaves
Familiarity information: ORDER CONIFERALES used as a noun is very rare.
Dictionary entry details
Sense 1
Meaning:
Profusely branching and chiefly evergreen trees and some shrubs having narrow or needlelike leaves
Classified under:
Nouns denoting plants
Synonyms:
Coniferales; order Coniferales
Hypernyms ("order Coniferales" is a kind of...):
plant order (the order of plants)
Meronyms (members of "order Coniferales"):
family Pinaceae; Pinaceae; pine family (a family of Pinaceae)
Cupressaceae; cypress family; family Cupressaceae (cypresses and junipers and many cedars)
araucaria family; Araucariaceae; family Araucariaceae (tall evergreen cone-bearing trees of South America and Australia with broad leathery leaves; in some classifications included in the Pinaceae)
Cephalotaxaceae; family Cephalotaxaceae; plum-yew family (a family of Cephalotaxaceae)
family Phyllocladaceae; Phyllocladaceae (a family of Phyllocladaceae)
family Podocarpaceae; Podocarpaceae; podocarpus family (gymnosperms with simple persistent needlelike or scalelike leaves)
family Sciadopityaceae; Sciadopityaceae (family comprising a single genus that until recently was considered part of Taxodiaceae)
family Taxaceae; Taxaceae; yew family (sometimes classified as member of order Taxales)
Holonyms ("order Coniferales" is a member of...):
class Coniferopsida; Coniferophyta; Coniferophytina; Coniferopsida; subdivision Coniferophytina (cone-bearing gymnosperms dating from the Carboniferous period; most are substantial trees; includes the classes Pinopsida (subdivision Pinophytina) and Ginkgopsida (subdivision Ginkgophytina) and Taxopsida (subdivision Taxophytina) which in turn include the surviving orders Coniferales and Taxales (yews) and sometimes Ginkgoales as well as extinct orders such as Cordaitales (of the Carboniferous and Permian))
Learn English with... Proverbs |
"Where there is plenty of water, it rains; where there is abundant heat, the sun shines." (Bhutanese proverb)
"Beware of he whose goodness you can't ask for for and whose evil you can't be protected from." (Arabic proverb)
"If you own two houses, it's raining in one of them." (Corsican proverb)