Archaeophyte
//ɑːˈkiː.əˌfaɪt//
Translations of "archaeophyte" (14 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Azerbaijani | arxeofit(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 | arqueòfit(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 | archeofyt(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 | arĥeofito(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(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 | arheofüüt(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(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 | arkeofyytti(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(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 | Archäophyt(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 | αρχαιόφυτα(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.) | archaiófyta | |
| Latin | archaeophytum(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 | archeofit(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 | археофит(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.) | arxeofit | |
| Spanish | arqueófito(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 | arkeofyt(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 | археофіт(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.) | arxeofit |
arxeofit
arqueòfit
archeofyt
arĥeofito, malnovplanto
arheofüüt, ürgtulnukas
arkeofyytti, muinaistulokas
Archäophyt
archaeophytum
archeofit
arqueófito
arkeofyt
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.