English edit

Etymology edit

New Latin rosulatus, from rosa (a rose).

Adjective edit

rosulate (comparative more rosulate, superlative most rosulate)

  1. (botany, of leaves and bracts) Arranged in small rose-like clusters.
    • 1874, The Garden: An Illustrated Weekly Journal of Gardening in All Its Branches, volume 5, page 326:
      It appears to claim a very close relationship to the preceding species, differing chiefly in the tiny leaves being rather more rosulate than caudiculate, and in not being adpressed, but rather the reverse; its petals, also, are narrower.
    • 1950, Gilbert Westacott Reynolds, The Aloes of South Africa, page 494:
      In young plants, the leaves are often more or less arranged in four vertical ranks, but become more rosulate with age.
    • 1971, Hans Bornman, David S. Hardy, Aloes of the South African Veld, page 199:
      [] differs from the typical form in having smaller, shorter more rosulate milky-green leaves, shorter sheaths, greenish-yellow buds, straighter flowers and narrower more or less unicoloured yellowish racemes.

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