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Lexicon of Pulse Crops integrates botanical and linguistic data to
analyze and interpret the grain legume significance from the
earliest archaeological and written records until the present day.
Aimed at both agronomic and linguistic research communities, this
book presents a database containing 9,500 common names in more than
900 languages and dialects of all ethnolinguistic families,
denoting more than 1,100 botanical taxa of 14 selected pulse crop
genera and species. The book begins with overviews of the world's
economically most important grain legume crops and their
uncultivated relatives, as well as the world's language families
with their inner structure, including both extinct and living
members. The main section of the text presents 14 specialized book
chapters covering Arachis, Cajanus, Cicer, Ervum, Faba, Glycine,
Lablab, Lathyrus, Lens, Lupinus, Phaseolus, Pisum, Vicia, and
Vigna. They provide the reader with extensive lists of the
botanically accepted species and subtaxa and surveys lexicological
abundance in all world's ethnolinguistic families, comprising
extinct and living as well as natural and constructed languages,
while the vernacular names for the most significant taxa are
presented in comprehensive tables. Each of these chapters also
presents the existing etymologies and novel approaches to
deciphering the origins of common names, accompanied by one
original color plate depicting possible root evolutions in the form
of corresponding pulse crop plants.
Lexicon of Pulse Crops integrates botanical and linguistic data to
analyze and interpret the grain legume significance from the
earliest archaeological and written records until the present day.
Aimed at both agronomic and linguistic research communities, this
book presents a database containing 9,500 common names in more than
900 languages and dialects of all ethnolinguistic families,
denoting more than 1,100 botanical taxa of 14 selected pulse crop
genera and species. The book begins with overviews of the world's
economically most important grain legume crops and their
uncultivated relatives, as well as the world's language families
with their inner structure, including both extinct and living
members. The main section of the text presents 14 specialized book
chapters covering Arachis, Cajanus, Cicer, Ervum, Faba, Glycine,
Lablab, Lathyrus, Lens, Lupinus, Phaseolus, Pisum, Vicia, and
Vigna. They provide the reader with extensive lists of the
botanically accepted species and subtaxa and surveys lexicological
abundance in all world's ethnolinguistic families, comprising
extinct and living as well as natural and constructed languages,
while the vernacular names for the most significant taxa are
presented in comprehensive tables. Each of these chapters also
presents the existing etymologies and novel approaches to
deciphering the origins of common names, accompanied by one
original color plate depicting possible root evolutions in the form
of corresponding pulse crop plants.
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