Definition
Variant or related form meaning lacking stamens or male reproductive organs in flowers.
Etymology
From Greek an- + andrios (male); variant spelling of anandrous.
Kelly Says
This botanical adjective is the feminine plant's declaration of independence—flowers with no stamens can't self-fertilize, so they've evolved to demand help from others!
Translations
AMአማርኛ
አንንድሪየስ
an-an-dree-yas
ARالعربية
أناندريوس
an-an-dree-oos
BNবাংলা
অনন্দ্রিয়াস
on-on-dree-yas
CACatalà
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
CSČeština
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
DADansk
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
DEDeutsch
anandrious
an-an-dree-oös
ELΕλληνικά
ανανδριος
ana-n-dree-os
ESEspañol
anandrio
an-an-dre-o
FAفارسی
اناندرئوس
i-nan-dree-oos
FISuomi
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
FRFrançais
anandrieux
an-an-dree-ø
GUGU
અનંદ્રિયસ
an-an-dri-yas
HAHA
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
HEעברית
אננדריוס
an-an-dree-os
HIहिन्दी
अनंद्रियस
an-an-dree-yas
HUMagyar
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
IDBahasa Indonesia
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
IGIG
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
ITItaliano
anandrio
an-an-dree-o
JA日本語
アナンドリウス
ana-ndo-ri-usu
KKKK
анандриус
an-an-dree-us
KMKM
អនាន្ត្រីអុស
a-na-n-t ree-o-us
KO한국어
아난드리우스
a-nan-deu-ri-u-seu
MRMR
अनंद्रियस
an-an-dri-yas
MSBahasa Melayu
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
MYမြန်မာ
အနန္ဒရီယပ်
a-nan-dree-ya-p
NLNederlands
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
NONorsk
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
PAPA
ਅਨੰਦਰੀਅਸ
an-an-dree-as
PLPolski
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
PTPortuguês
anandrio
an-an-dree-o
RORomână
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
RUРусский
анандриус
a-nan-dree-us
SVSvenska
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
SWKiswahili
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
TAதமிழ்
அனந்திரியஸ்
ana-n-thri-yas
TEతెలుగు
అనంద్రియస్
ana-n-dri-yas
THไทย
อันแอนดริอุส
un-an-dree-us
TLTL
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
TRTürkçe
anandrius
an-an-dree-üs
UKУкраїнська
анандріус
an-an-dree-us
URاردو
اناندرئوس
i-nan-dree-oos
VITiếng Việt
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
YOYO
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
ZH中文
安安德里奥斯
ān ān dé lǐ ào sī
ZUZU
anandrious
an-an-dree-us
Ethical Language Guidance
Gender History
Greek andr- root carries male-default semantics. Botanical taxonomy inherited androcentric language when describing reproductive structures.
Inclusive Usage
Use in strictly botanical contexts where the term is technical standard, but note the terminology reflects historical male-centered classification systems.
Inclusive Alternatives
["stamen-absent","without male reproductive parts"]