A variant or alternate form, possibly referring to a type of seed, plant product, or botanical specimen; the term is not widely used in modern English.
Possibly from Latin or botanical Latin origins, though the exact etymology is unclear. May relate to 'anatto' or be a botanical classification term.
Anatum appears mainly in old botanical texts and scientific nomenclature, representing a naming convention from when scientists were still cataloging the plant world and assigning Latin names to every new discovery.
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