The Big List of Botanical Plant Names and their Meanings for Gardeners

Plate from ‘Culpepper’s Complete Herbal’ by Nicholas Culpepper, published in 1653

Botanical names, also known as scientific names, follow a binomial nomenclature – a two-part system for naming and categorizing plants that was originally developed by the Swedish botanist and physician Carl Linnaeus in 1758.

This system consists of the genus, a higher taxonomic (classification) rank that groups closely related species, followed by the species, which refers to a group of similar organisms capable of interbreeding.

These taxonomic names not only categorize plants, but also convey information about them.

For example, in the case of the White Willow tree, with the botanical name Salix alba, we see that:

  • The first part of the name, “Salix” indicates it belongs to the willow genus (group).
  • The specific epithet, “alba” identifies the type of willow species, and describes it as having a white appearance.

In botanical nomenclature, the species names often describe various plant characteristics. These terms are typically derived from Latin, but sometimes from Greek or other languages, and may also use surnames to honour the botanists who discovered the plants.

Understanding these botanical terms is valuable to gardeners, offering insights into a plant’s distinctive features and characteristics.

Here is a comprehensive list of botanical terms commonly found in plant species names, arranged alphabetically, along with their meanings:

   A

  1. abietina – related to fir trees
  2. abrotanifolia – with leaves like Artemisia (wormwood)
  3. acaulis – stemless
  4. acutifolia – sharp-leaved
  5. alba – white
  6. alpina – from the Alps
  7. altissima – very tall
  8. amara – bitter
  9. ambigua – ambiguous, uncertain
  10. amblycarpa – blunt-fruited
  11. amplexicaulis – with stem-clasping leaves
  12. angustifolia – narrow-leaved
  13. annua – annual
  14. arctica – from the Arctic
  15. argentea – silvery
  16. arvensis – of the field
  17. aurantiaca – orange
  18. aurantiaca – orange-colored
  19. aurea – golden, yellow
  20. australis – from the south (not necessarily Australia)
  21. autumnalis – of autumn
  22. azurea – blue

    B
  23. barbata – bearded
  24. bicolor – two-colored
  25. bipinnata – twice pinnate
  26. bracteata – with bracts
  27. brevifolia – short-leaved
  28. brevipes – short-stalked

    C
  29. caerulea – blue
  30. caespitosa – dense
  31. californica – from California
  32. campanulata – bell-shaped
  33. campestris – of the field
  34. canadensis – from Canada
  35. capensis – from the Cape, South Africa
  36. capillaris – hair-like or thread-like
  37. caroliniana – from the Carolinas
  38. castanea – chestnut-colored
  39. caudata – with a tail-like appendage
  40. centifolia – hundred-petaled
  41. chamaedrys – ground oak
  42. chinensis – from China
  43. chrysantha – yellow
  44. ciliaris – fringed with hairs
  45. coccifera – bearing scarlet berries
  46. coccinea – red
  47. coerulea – blue
  48. compacta – compact
  49. cordata – heart-shaped
  50. cordifolia – heart-shaped leaves
  51. coronata – crowned
  52. crassifolia – thick-leaved
  53. crispa – curled or wavy
  54. crispus – curled or wrinkled
  55. cuneata – wedge-shaped
  56. cylindracea – cylindrical
  57. cylindrica – cylindrical

    D
  58. decidua – deciduous
  59. decumbens – reclining, lying down, sprawling or trailing along the ground
  60. densiflora – dense-flowered
  61. dentata – toothed
  62. denticulata – toothed
  63. depressa – flattened or pressed down
  64. diffusa – spreading or diffuse
  65. digitata – (leaves) like a hand, with 5 lobes
  66. diphylla – two-leaved
  67. discolor – of different colors

    E
  68. edulis – edible
  69. effusa – spreading
  70. elata – tall, elevated
  71. elatior – taller or more elevated
  72. elegans – elegant
  73. elliptica – elliptical
  74. ensifolia – sword-shaped leaves
  75. equisetiformis – resembling horsetails
  76. esculenta – edible

    F
  77. farinosa – floury, powdery
  78. fasciculata – clustered
  79. fastigiata – upright or columnar in growth
  80. filiformis – thread-like
  81. flava – yellow
  82. flora plena – with double flowers
  83. floribunda – abundantly flowering
  84. foetida – with an unpleasant smell
  85. fragrans – fragrant
  86. fusca – dark brown
  87. fusiformis – spindle-shaped

    G
  88. gigantea – gigantic
  89. glabra – smooth
  90. glandulosa – glandular
  91. glauca – bluish or covered with a whitish bloom
  92. glomerata – clustered
  93. graminifolia – grass-leaved
  94. grandiflora – large-flowered

    H
  95. hastata – spear-shaped or halberd-shaped
  96. helianthoides – resembling sunflowers
  97. heterantha – different-flowered
  98. heterophylla – variable leaves
  99. hirsuta – hairy
  100. hispida – bristly
  101. humilis – short
  102. hybrida – hybrid
  103. hyemalis – of winter
  104. hypoleuca – with a white or pale underside

    I
  105. imberbis – beardless
  106. incana – grayish-white
  107. incarnata – flesh-colored
  108. incisa – deeply cut
  109. indica – from India
  110. inermis – without spines
  111. intricata – intricate, complex
  112. involucrata – having an involucre

    J-K
  113. japonica – from Japan

    L
  114. laevigata – smooth
  115. laevis – smooth
  116. lanceolata – lance-shaped (leaves)
  117. lasiocarpa – woolly-fruited
  118. latifolia – wide-leaved
  119. laxa – loose, not dense
  120. laxiflora – lax-flowered
  121. leptophylla – slender-leaved
  122. linearis – linear, narrow
  123. littoralis – coastal, shore-dwelling
  124. longiflora – with long flowers
  125. longifolia – with long leaves
  126. lucida – shiny
  127. lucidula – somewhat shiny
  128. lutea – yellow
  129. luteola – somewhat yellow
  130. lyrata – lyre-shaped

    M
  131. macrantha – large flowered
  132. macrocarpa – with large fruits
  133. macrophylla – with large leaves
  134. macrorrhiza – with large roots
  135. maculata – spotted
  136. magellanica – from the Straits of Magellan
  137. majus – bigger
  138. maritima – growing near the sea
  139. micrantha – small flowered
  140. microphylla – with small leaves
  141. millefolia – with many (thousands of) leaves
  142. minima – smallest
  143. mollis – soft
  144. mollissima – very soft
  145. monstrosa – monstrous, abnormal
  146. montana – from mountains
  147. multiflora – many-flowered

    N
  148. nana – small
  149. nigra – black
  150. nitida – shining
  151. nudiflora – naked-flowered

    O
  152. oblongifolia – oblong-leaved
  153. obtusa – blunt
  154. odorata – fragrant
  155. odoratissima – most fragrant
  156. officinalis – with herbal uses
  157. officinarum – used in medicine
  158. orbicularis – round
  159. orientalis – eastern, from the East
  160. ovata – oval-shaped

    P
  161. pallens – pale or becoming pale
  162. pallida – cream
  163. palustris – from marshes
  164. paniculata – paniculate, in panicles
  165. paradoxa – paradoxical, unusual
  166. parviflora – small-flowered
  167. parvifolia – with small leaves
  168. pauciflora – few-flowered
  169. paucifolia – with few leaves
  170. pedata – foot-shaped, referring to lobed leaves resembling a bird’s foot
  171. pedunculata – with a long stalk
  172. peltata – shield-shaped
  173. pendula – hanging
  174. penduliflora – hanging flowers
  175. peregrina – foreign or exotic
  176. perennis – perennial
  177. peruviana – from Peru
  178. phyllostachys – leaf spike
  179. pilosella – with fine hairs
  180. pinifolia – pine-like leaves
  181. pinnata – with pinnate leaves
  182. pinnatifida – pinnately divided or lobed
  183. platycarpa – broad-fruited
  184. plectranthoides – resembling the genus Plectranthus
  185. plicata – folded or pleated
  186. plumosa – feathery
  187. polyphylla – with many leaves, leafy
  188. praecox – early, of spring
  189. pratensis – of meadows
  190. prostrata – prostrate
  191. pseudacorus – false acorus (sweet flag)
  192. puberula – slightly hairy
  193. pubescens – pubescent, downy, covered with fine short hairs
  194. pulcherrima – most beautiful
  195. pumila – dwarf
  196. pumila – small
  197. punctata – spotted
  198. punctulata – spotted
  199. punica – red
  200. punicea – purplish-red
  201. purpurascens – becoming purple
  202. purpurata – purple
  203. purpurea – deep pink
  204. pygmaea – small

    Q
  205. quadrifolia – four-leaved
  206. quadrifurca – four-forked
  207. quercifolia – oak-leaved
  208. quercina – oak-like
  209. quinquenervia – five-veined

    R
  210. radicans – rooting
  211. ramosa – branched
  212. recta – erect
  213. recurvata – recurved or curved backward
  214. repanda – wavy-margined
  215. repens – creeping
  216. reticulata – net-veined
  217. retusa – blunt, notched
  218. rigens – stiff, rigid
  219. rigida – rigid or stiff
  220. rosea – rose pink, rosy
  221. rosmarinifolia – rosemary-like leaves
  222. rotundifolia – round-leaved
  223. rubella – somewhat red
  224. rubra – red
  225. rufa – reddish-brown
  226. rugosa – wrinkled or rough
  227. rupestris – of hills, rock-dwelling

    S
  228. sagittata – arrow-shaped
  229. salicifolia – willow-like leaves
  230. saligna – willow-like
  231. sanguinea – blood-red
  232. sarmentosum – producing sarments, long, trailing or creeping stems
  233. sativa – cultivated
  234. saxatilis – of rocks
  235. scabra – rough to the touch
  236. scandens – climbing or scrambling upwards
  237. scaposa – with a scape (leafless stalk)
  238. scariosa – thin and dry
  239. semperviva – perennial
  240. serotina – late-flowering
  241. serpyllifolia – thyme-leaved
  242. serrata – serrated
  243. sessiliflora – without a stalk
  244. sibirica – from Siberia
  245. silvestris – of the woods
  246. sinensis – from China
  247. spathulata – spoon-shaped
  248. spicata – spiked
  249. spinosa – spiny
  250. spiralis – spiral
  251. stellata – star-like, starry
  252. stolonifera – producing stolons
  253. stricta – upright or erect
  254. subulata – awl-shaped
  255. suphurea – yellow
  256. sylvatica – woodland
  257. sylvestris – of woods

    T
  258. tardiflora – late-flowering
  259. tenuifolia – thin-leaved, with thin, narrow leaves
  260. tetragona – four-angled
  261. tomentosa – covered in dense hairs (tomentum)
  262. tortuosa – twisted or contorted
  263. triangularis – triangular
  264. trichocarpa – with hairy fruit
  265. trifoliata – with three leaflets
  266. trinervia – three-veined
  267. tripartita – divided into three parts
  268. truncata – truncated or cut off
  269. tuberosa – tuberous

    U
  270. uliginosa – marsh-loving
  271. umbellata – flowers in an umbel
  272. undulata – wavy-edged, wavy-margined
  273. uniflora – single-flowered, with one flower

    V
  274. valeriana – named after the genus Valerian
  275. venusta – charming or beautiful
  276. vermicularis – worm-like
  277. vermiculata – worm-like, twisted
  278. vernalis – of spring
  279. vesicaria – bladder-like
  280. villosa – hairy
  281. virescens – becoming green
  282. virgata – slender, wand-like, twiggy
  283. virgatum – twiggy or wand-like
  284. viridis – green
  285. viscosa – sticky
  286. vulcanica – associated with volcanoes
  287. vulgaris – common

    W-X
  288. xanthocarpa – with yellow fruits
  289. xanthophylla – yellow-leaved
  290. xerophila – drought-loving

    Y-Z
  291. zeylanica – from Ceylon (Sri Lanka)
  292. zygopetala – yoke-petaled

If you know of any more botanical name terms that are not listed here, please let us know and we’ll add them in!

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