Archaeophyte

//ɑːˈkiː.əˌfaɪt//

Synonyms for "archaeophyte"

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Related word relations

OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.

4 relation types

derived

1 entries

has context

1 entries

holonym

1 entries

related to

3 entries

Translations

17 translations across 14 languages.

Powered by Wiktionary

Azerbaijani

1 entries
  • arxeofit noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

Catalan

1 entries
  • arqueòfit noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

Dutch

1 entries
  • archeofyt noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

Esperanto

2 entries
  • arĥeofito noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)
  • malnovplanto noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

Estonian

2 entries
  • arheofüüt noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)
  • ürgtulnukas noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

Finnish

2 entries
  • arkeofyytti noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)
  • muinaistulokas noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

German

1 entries
  • Archäophyt noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

Greek

1 entries
  • αρχαιόφυτα noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

Latin

1 entries
  • archaeophytum noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

Polish

1 entries
  • archeofit noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

Russian

1 entries
  • археофит noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

Spanish

1 entries
  • arqueófito noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

Swedish

1 entries
  • arkeofyt noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

Ukrainian

1 entries
  • археофіт noun (plant introduced to an area by humans (or arrived naturally, but from an area in which it was present as a human introduction) and became naturalized before 1500 C.E.)

Sample sentences

14 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

[page 126] Archæophytes (Rikli), plants which have occurred constantly with us since pre-historic times, originally, however, growing wild nowhere in the country, field and garden weeds, […] [page 127] Further, the flora of the cultivated areas consists of a very heterogeneous element, e.g., the field weed flora is composed of at least two groups, the true Archæophytes […] and the spontaneous Apophytes […]

Source: wiktionary

Anthropochorous plants are divided into (a) those introduced unintentionally, including ephemerophytes (casuals), epoikophytes (colonists, aliens) and archaeophytes (naturalised plants), and (b) those introduced intentionally, including ergasiphytes (foreign cultivated plants) and ergasiphygophytes (escapes from cultivation).

Source: wiktionary

It may be doubtful whether the three species first mentioned should more properly be regarded as archæophytes, since they also occur outside the actually cultivated soil; […]

Source: wiktionary

N. Eur. an archæophyte, following the cereals, Færoes one place, but here noticed with an interval of 30 years.

Source: wiktionary

Showing 4 of 14 available sentences.

More for "archaeophyte"

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.