Biblicke stromy - anglicky
The Trees of the Bible
– Acacia (Exodus 25: 5): Kinds of trees and shrubs belonging to the single-parent family of Fabaceae (subfamily Mimosoideae), which possess prickles and two species, one of which provides gum arabic and the other chewing gum from Senegal).
– Sandalwood (2 Chronicles 2: 8): Species of small trees, with opposite leaves, with hermaphroditic flowers, which grow in the Far East.
– Appletree (Song of Songs 2: 3): Fruit tree, the tree of the Rosaceae family, of the genus Malus, which produces apples.
– Mulberry (2 Samuel 5: 23): Genus of the family Moraceae, alternate deciduous trees or shrubs, flowers in kittens, and whose compound fruits are blackberries.
– Broom (1 Kings 19: 4): Kind of plants of the family Fabaceae, which contains a large number of shrubs and shrubs, most with yellow flowers.
– Cedar (1 Kings 4:33): in Europe, in the field of Botany, it is designated as a species of the genus Cedrus. A large conifer of the Pinaceae family, with horizontal branches in superimposed planes and globular and erect cones, often used for ornamentation and whose wood is considered incorruptible.
– Cypress (2 Kings 19: 23): A dark green tree of the family Cupressaceae, which rises straight and pointed and is often planted in cemeteries.
Myrtle (Nehemiah 8:15): Kind of evergreen shrubs of the family Myrtaceae.
– Walnut (Song of Songs 6: 11): Large deciduous tree alternate imparipinnate, with small greenish female flowers, joined by two to four and giving nuts (indehiscent drupes).
– Cypress (2 Kings 19: 23): A dark green tree of the family Cupressaceae, which rises straight and pointed and is often planted in cemeteries.
– Ebony (Ezekiel 27:15): Very hard tropical wood.
– The fig tree (Matthew 21: 19): Tree of the Moraceae family, which bears figs.
– Oak (Genesis 35: 8): Genus of trees and shrubs of the northern hemisphere, deciduous or evergreen, simple and alternate, and whose fruits are acorns, fixed in a cup.
– Olivier (Judges 9: 8): Tree of the family Oleaceae, whose foliage is always green and which carries the olives.
– Palm tree (Exodus 15: 27): A monocotyledonous plant native to warm regions (angiosperm monocotyledonous angiosperms, family Arecaceae or (Palmaceae)) – a simple stem, bare and rough (called stipe), crowns a bunch of large palmate leaves or pinnacles arranged in fan, with flowers in clusters, and whose fruits are berries or drupes.
– Platane (Genesis 30: 37): A genus of Platanaceae, large trees with bark cracking scales (rhytidomes) letting appear cork by zones, large deciduous leaves alternate and lobed, and whose fruits are achenes, generally hairy together in hanging balls.
– Grenadier (1 Samuel 14: 2): Kind of small deciduous fruit trees.
– Poplar (Genesis 30:37): Genus of large trees in moist, dioecious places, with male or female flowers united in pendent kittens, and appearing before leaves that are deciduous, simple, and alternate.
– Sycamore (Luke 19: 4): A kind of fig tree very common in Egypt and the Near East in Antiquity.
– Sycamore (Luke 19: 4): A kind of fig tree very common in Egypt and the Near East in Antiquity.
– Tamaris (Genesis 21:33): A shrub with very small leaves and flower spikes, which is widespread in the Mediterranean region.
– Willow (Ezekiel 17: 5): Kind of trees or shrubs, deciduous, alternate, ovate or lanceolate, with flowers in kittens, male or female, borne by different feet (dioecious plants) and growing usually in meadows and along streams.
– Vine (Psalms 107: 37): A plant with a woody stem and usually a tortoise, which produces the grapes from which wine is made.