ramarama
English
Noun
ramarama (uncountable)
- (New Zealand) A species of evergreen myrtle tree, Lophomyrtus bullata.
- 1889, Thomas Kirk, “Myrtus bullata, Banks and Solander”, in The Forest Flora of New Zealand, page 267:
- The ramarama is the largest and most attractive of the New Zealand myrtles: it varies from a dwarf shrub to a small tree 30ft. in height, but is easily distinguished from all other indigenous plants by its reddish-brown leaves, the spaces between the veins of which are tumid or inflated, presenting a singular appearance, as if blistered.
- 1987, John Brack Mortimer, Trees for the New Zealand Countryside: A Planter's Guide, page 241:
- L. bullata (ramarama) is a beautiful shrub or small tree growing to about 5m.
- 1994, James Herries beattie, Traditional Lifeways of the Southern Maori:
- He mentioned a ramarama tree - this, he explained, was not the ramarama, or pepper-tree, of Murihiku, but was a tree like the rohutu, bearing black berries like the konini (fuchsia).
Further reading
- Lophomyrtus bullata on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Fijian
Etymology
From Proto-Oceanic *ramaʀ, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *damaʀ, from Proto-Austronesian *damaʀ (“tree resin used in torch”).
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