styraciflua L (
Hamamelidaceae), sino que esto lo hizo mayormente la liana introducida Lonicera japonica Wall.Cat.473 (Caprifoliaceae) (Dillenburg et al., 1993b).
These metabolites appear mainly in Bruniaceae,
Hamamelidaceae, Saxifragaceae, Fagaceae, Myricaceae, Betulaceae and Juglandaceae.
a BQ 1391
HAMAMELIDACEAE (1/1) Matudaea trinervia Lundell (A) A ECT 2015 HIPPOCRATEACEAE (1/1) Hippocratea celastroides H.B.K.
[9.sup.2] = [2.sup.5] + [7.sup.2]
HAMAMELIDACEAE (web2) = ACADEME + MAHEILA (a large river sailing-boat in Iraq)
The more important canopy species include the highly commercially valuable Altingia excelsa (
Hamamelidaceae), and several members of the Lauraceae (Litsea) and Fagaceae (Lithocarpus).
It is also a habitat for unique species, such as Rhodoleia sp., a new tree species discovered in 1993 (of an uncommon family,
Hamamelidaceae, with the nearest relative on Mt.
While it is a name that will be included in reference books about Liquidambar styraciflua of the Family
Hamamelidaceae, the note that this name is potentially misleading as well as botanically incorrect will also likely be included.
Family Scientific Name Caesalpiniaceae Cercis canadenses Cornaceae Cornus amomum Cornaceae Cornus florida Cornaceae Cornus racemosa Cornaceae Nyssa sylvatica Fagaceae Quercus alba Fagaceae Quercus imbricaria Fagaceae Quercus macrocarpa Fagaceae Quercus michauxii Fagaceae Quercus palustres
Hamamelidaceae Liquidambar styraciflua Juglandaceae Carya illinoinensis Juglandaceae Juglans nigra Lauraceae Lindera benzoin Oleaceae Fraxinus pennsylvanica Plantanaceae Plantanus occidentales Rosaceae Crataegus phaenopyruin Rosaceae Physocarpus opulifoius Rubiaceae Cephalanthus occidentales Family Common Name Inds.
Word Ways is a treasure trove of logologically-talented words, words such as HORSESHOER in which the letters of the first half of the word are repeated in the second half in a different order; the 5-letter IOUEA (WW May 1993), the only word made exclusively of one each of the five main vowels; and
HAMAMELIDACEAE, seemingly the longest word made from first half of the alphabet letters.
In
Hamamelidaceae, the bird-pollinated Rhodoleia has flat inflorescences with peripherally radiating (enlarged) petals (Bogle, 1989).
An improvement on the first two of these is the 14-letter
HAMAMELIDACEAE, which has received at least three previous mentions in Word Ways (February 1972, my article "Lightweights and Heavyweights" in November 1972, and February 1979).