ruderal

See also: rudéral

English

Etymology

Borrowed from New Latin ruderalis, from Latin rudus (rubble).

Noun

ruderal (plural ruderals)

  1. (botany) Any plant growing in rubbish or very poor soil
  2. (botany) A plant tending to volunteer in disturbed soil.

Adjective

ruderal (comparative more ruderal, superlative most ruderal)

  1. (botany) That grows in rubbish or poor soil
    • 2011, John Jeremiah Sullivan, Pulphead:
      Rafinesque perfected his variant of this honorable philosophy while botanizing in the literal backyards of my childhood, examining ruderal plants I've known all my life, and so I have appropriated it from him, with minor tweaks.

Coordinate terms

Translations

Catalan

Etymology

Learned borrowing from New Latin ruderalis.

Pronunciation

Adjective

ruderal m or f (masculine and feminine plural ruderals)

  1. ruderal

Further reading

Spanish

Adjective

ruderal m or f (masculine and feminine plural ruderales)

  1. ruderal

Further reading

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