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caudex

[ kaw-deks ]

noun

, Botany.
, plural cau·di·ces [kaw, -d, uh, -seez], cau·dex·es.
  1. the main stem of a tree, especially a palm or tree fern.
  2. the woody or thickened persistent base of an herbaceous perennial.


caudex

/ ˈkɔːdɛks /

noun

  1. the thickened persistent stem base of some herbaceous perennial plants
  2. the woody stem of palms and tree ferns
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

caudex

/ dĕks′ /

  1. The thickened, usually underground base of the stem of many perennial herbaceous plants, from which new leaves and flowering stems arise.
  2. The trunk of a palm or tree fern.
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Word History and Origins

Origin of caudex1

1820–30; < Latin: tree trunk; codex
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Word History and Origins

Origin of caudex1

C19: from Latin
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Example Sentences

She loves caudiciform succulents — plants that have an above-soil round caudex — and designs squat planters that highlight the plant’s swollen stem.

The word code comes from the Latin caudex, the wooden pith of a tree on which scribes carved their writing.

June–Aug.—Plant raised on its prolonged caudex when growing in water.

The stem is short or entirely wanting, arising from a long and thick caudex.

Some sorts, the present one included, are not very readily propagated, as the crowns are not on separate pieces of root, but often crowded on a woody caudex.

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