lithops
Appearance
See also: Lithops
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From the genus name, translingual Lithops.
Noun
[edit]lithops (plural lithops)
- Any of the genus Lithops of succulent plants resembling stones.
- 1978, Margaret J. Martin, Peter Richard Chapman, Succulents and Their Cultivation, Schribner, page 86:
- Lithops are self-sterile, so that seed will only be produced if the plant is pollinated from another specimen from a different clone or group. Yellow flowers will not fertilize white and vice-versa. There is not the same range of flower colour as shown by the conophytums; lithops’ flowers are either white or yellow.
- 2008 January 3, Anne Raver, “No Need to Fly South to See Blossoms in Winter”, in New York Times[1]:
- And the succulents house, which is kept a cool 60 degrees during the day and 50 to 55 degrees at night, holds aloes and lithops (which look like small stones), just beginning to bloom.
- 2018, Andrea Afra, The Succulent Manual, unnumbered page:
- Lithops (‘Lithops’ singular) are easily one of Earth's weirdest plants making them highly popular with succulent lovers. They're also infamous for being easy to kill. In fact, I bet we'd be hard pressed to find someone who has never killed a Lithops unless they've just never had one, and that doesn't count.
Translations
[edit]Lithops genus plant
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