hygrophyte
English
Etymology
From hygro- (“moist”) + -phyte (“plant”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈhaɪɡɹəʊfaɪt/
Noun
hygrophyte (plural hygrophytes)
- (biology) Any plant that thrives on very wet but not submerged ground.
- 1907, Francis Cavers, Plant Biology: A Text-book of Elementary Botany Arranged for Modern Methods of Teaching:
- Between xerophytes and hygrophytes we find a great many intermediate forms (Mesophytes), comprising, in fact, the majority of British plants, which grow in meadows, pastures, cultivated fields, and in woods and plantations of deciduous trees (Beech, Oak, Birch, etc.).
Coordinate terms
- hydrophyte (plant that grows under water)
Derived terms
Translations
type of plant
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French
Noun
hygrophyte f (plural hygrophytes)