panicle
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin pānicula, diminutive of pānus (“ear of millet, literally 'thread wound on a bobbin'”), from Ancient Greek πῆνος (pênos, “web”), πηνίον (pēníon, “bobbin”). Doublet of panocha.
Noun
panicle (plural panicles)
- (botany) A compound raceme.
- 1838, George Don, A General System of Gardening and Botany, page 64:
- Inflorescence a large terminal, leafy, cross-armed panicle, composed of small, 5-flowered, terminal umbellets.
Hyponyms
Translations
a compound raceme
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