To view prices and purchase online, please login or create an account now.



A Gardener's Latin: The language of plants explained (National Trust Home & Garden)

Hardback

Main Details

Title A Gardener's Latin: The language of plants explained (National Trust Home & Garden)
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Richard Bird
By (author) National Trust Books
SeriesNational Trust Home & Garden
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:144
Dimensions(mm): Height 213,Width 146
Category/GenreHistorical and comparative linguistics
Botany and plant sciences
Gardening
Plants
ISBN/Barcode 9781910232057
ClassificationsDewey:580.14
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher HarperCollins Publishers
Imprint National Trust Books
Publication Date 7 May 2015
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

An exquisitely illustrated, lively exploration of Latin plant names for gardeners. More than just a dictionary, this fascinating book explains the meanings behind hundreds of Latin plant terms, their flowering times, leaf patterns, natural habitats and all sorts of other useful information. Every gardener needs to know their Latin names. They may look confusing at first, but once you understand what certain key words mean, impenetrable-sounding and hard-to-pronounce species names are suddenly demystified. Many Latin names hide the secrets of where the plant is found, its colour, flowering times, leaf pattern, natural habitat and all sorts of other information that's extremely useful to the gardener: if you want a plant for a shady place, choose one with a name ending in sylvestris ('of woods'), while if your garden is dry, look out for the suffix epigeios ('of dry places'). More than just a dictionary of plant names, this fascinating book explains the meaning of hundreds of Latin plant terms, grouped into handily themed sections such as plants that are named after famous women, plants that are named after the shape of their leaves, plants that are named after their fragrance or the time of year that they flower. Within these pages you'll learn that Digitalis purpurea (the common foxglove) is purple, that the sanguineum in Geranium sanguineum means 'bloody' (its common name is the bloody cranesbill), and to steer clear of any plant whose Latin name ends in infestus.

Author Biography

Richard Bird is the author of nearly 30 books as well as magazine articles. He lectures widely on hardy perennials and alpine plants. He has sat on the maincommittees of the Hardy Plant Society and the Alpine Garden Society, as well as on the RHS Joint Rock Garden Plant Committee.