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arrowroot vs amylum

amylum vs arrowroot

arrowroot and amylum both are nouns.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
arrowroot Yes No No No
amylum Yes No No No
As nouns, amylum is a hypernym of arrowroot; that is, amylum is a word with a broader meaning than arrowroot:
  • arrowroot: a nutritive starch obtained from the root of the arrowroot plant
  • amylum: a complex carbohydrate found chiefly in seeds, fruits, tubers, roots and stem pith of plants, notably in corn, potatoes, wheat, and rice; an important foodstuff and used otherwise especially in adhesives and as fillers and stiffeners for paper and textiles
Other hypernyms of arrowroot include starch.
arrowroot (noun) amylum (noun)
white-flowered West Indian plant whose root yields arrowroot starch a complex carbohydrate found chiefly in seeds, fruits, tubers, roots and stem pith of plants, notably in corn, potatoes, wheat, and rice; an important foodstuff and used otherwise especially in adhesives and as fillers and stiffeners for paper and textiles
canna grown especially for its edible rootstock from which arrowroot starch is obtained
a nutritive starch obtained from the root of the arrowroot plant
Difference between arrowroot and amylum

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