lyngjafni
Icelandic
editEtymology
editFrom lyng (“heather, ling”) + jafni (“clubmoss”).
Pronunciation
editNoun
editlyngjafni m (genitive singular lyngjafna, no plural)
- interrupted clubmoss (Lycopodium annotinum)
- 1954, Ingólfur Davíðsson, “Nokkrir fundarstaðir fágætra jurta [Some discovery sites of rare plants]”, in Náttúrufræðingurinn [The Natural Scientist], volume 24, number 1, pages 31–36:
- Í berghlaupinu mikla (hólahrúgaldinu) utan við Stakkahlíð vex allmikið af lyngjafna (Lycopodium annotinum), einkum nálægt ánni á Hraundal.
- In the large rock slide (the formless hill) outside Stakkahlíð grows a considerable amount of interrupted clubmoss (Lycopodium annotinum), especially close to the river at Hraundalur.
- 1995, Ólafur Karl Nielsen, “Karrar og gróðurfar [Rock ptarmigans and flora]”, in Náttúrufræðingurinn [The Natural Scientist], volume 65, numbers 1-2, pages 81–102:
- Ekki var greint á milli litunarjafna Diphazium alpinum, lyngjafna Lycopodium annotinum, mosajafna Selaginella selaginoides og skollafingurs Huperzia selago.
- No distinction was made between alpine clubmoss Dyphazium alpinum, interrupted clubmoss Lycopodium annotinum, lesser clubmoss Selaginella selaginoides and fir clubmoss Huperzia selago.
- 2007, Elsa Steinunn Halldórsdóttir, “Alkalóíðar úr íslenskum jafnategundum (Lycopodium), andkólínesterasaverkun in vitro [Alkaloids from Icelandic clubmoss species (Lycopodium), anticholinesterase effect in vitro]”, in Læknablaðið [The Medical Journal], volume 93, number Supplement 53, page 33:
- Einangraðir voru þrír alkalóíðar úr lyngjafna og reyndust þeir vera annotinin, annotin og annotin N-oxíð.
- Three alkaloids from the interrupted clubmoss were isolated and they turned out to be annotinine, annotine and annotine N-oxide.
Declension
editDeclension of lyngjafni | ||
---|---|---|
m-w1 | singular | |
indefinite | definite | |
nominative | lyngjafni | lyngjafninn |
accusative | lyngjafna | lyngjafnann |
dative | lyngjafna | lyngjafnanum |
genitive | lyngjafna | lyngjafnans |