s/n11605708

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has gloss(noun) cone-bearing gymnosperms dating from the Carboniferous period; most are substantial trees; includes the classes Pinopsida (subdivision Pinophytina) and Ginkgopsida (subdivision Ginkgophytina) and Taxopsida (subdivision Taxophytina) which in turn include the surviving orders Coniferales and Taxales (yews) and sometimes Ginkgoales as well as extinct orders such as Cordaitales (of the Carboniferous and Permian)
Coniferophytina, Coniferopsida, Coniferophyta, class Coniferopsida, subdivision Coniferophytina
lexicalizationeng: class Coniferopsida
lexicalizationeng: Coniferophyta
lexicalizationeng: Coniferophytina
lexicalizationeng: Coniferopsida
lexicalizationeng: subdivision Coniferophytina
subclass of(noun) (biology) a taxonomic group containing one or more orders
class
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has member(noun) extinct plants having tall arborescent trunks comparable to or more advanced than cycads; known from the Pennsylvanian period; probably extinct since the Mesozoic era
order Cordaitales, Cordaitales
has member(noun) most conifers: in some systems classified as a class (Pinopsida) and in others as a subdivision (Pinophytina); used in some classifications for one of five subdivisions of Gymnospermophyta
Pinopsida, Pinophytina, class Pinopsida, subdivision Pinophytina
has member(noun) profusely branching and chiefly evergreen trees and some shrubs having narrow or needlelike leaves
order Coniferales, Coniferales
has member(noun) yews: in some systems classified as a class (Taxopsida) and in others as a subdivision (Taxophytina) used in some classifications for one of five subdivisions of Gymnospermophyta
class Taxopsida, Taxopsida, subdivision Taxophytina, Taxophytina
has member(noun) coextensive with the family Taxaceae: yews
order Taxales, Taxales
member of(noun) plants having naked seeds not enclosed in an ovary; in some systems considered a class (Gymnospermae) and in others a division (Gymnospermophyta); comprises three subdivisions (or classes): Cycadophytina (class Cycadopsida) and Gnetophytina (class Gnetopsida) and Coniferophytina (class Coniferopsida); in some classifications the Coniferophytina are divided into three groups: Pinophytina (class Pinopsida) and Ginkgophytina (class Ginkgopsida) and Taxophytina (class Taxopsida)
Gymnospermae, class Gymnospermae, division Gymnospermophyta, Gymnospermophyta
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similare/Coniferopsida

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