WordCmp.com

ground pine vs Lycopodium clavitum

Lycopodium clavitum vs ground pine

ground pine and Lycopodium clavitum both are nouns.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
ground pine Yes No No No
Lycopodium clavitum Yes No No No
As nouns, Lycopodium clavitum is a hyponym of ground pine; that is, Lycopodium clavitum is a word with a more specific, narrower meaning than ground pine:
  • ground pine: any of several club mosses having long creeping stems and erect branches
  • Lycopodium clavitum: a variety of club moss, also known as wolf's-foot clubmoss, stag's-horn clubmoss and ground pine (Lycopodium clavitum)
ground pine (noun) Lycopodium clavitum (noun)
any of several club mosses having long creeping stems and erect branches a variety of club moss, also known as wolf's-foot clubmoss, stag's-horn clubmoss and ground pine (Lycopodium clavitum)
low-growing annual with yellow flowers dotted red; faintly aromatic of pine resin; Europe, British Isles and North Africa
Difference between ground pine and Lycopodium clavitum

© WordCmp.com 2024, CC-BY 4.0 / CC-BY-SA 3.0.