triticum dicoccum dicoccoides

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Definition

Noun: - A wild wheat species native to the Near East, specifically identified as being found wild in Palestine. It is considered the wild ancestor or prototype from which certain cultivated wheats were domesticated.

Usage Notes
  • This is a very specific botanical or taxonomic term. It is primarily used in scientific contexts such as agriculture, botany, genetics, and archaeology when discussing the origins and domestication of wheat.
  • It is not a term used in everyday conversation.
Examples
  • Scientific Context:
    • The genetic analysis confirmed that Triticum dicoccum dicoccoides is the direct progenitor of emmer wheat.
    • Archaeobotanists study seeds of Triticum dicoccum dicoccoides to understand early agricultural practices.
Advanced Usage
  • The term is often abbreviated in technical literature as after its first full mention.
  • It may be discussed in relation to concepts like "center of origin" for crops or "crop wild relatives."
Variants and Related Words
  • Wild emmer wheat: A common English name for this species.
  • Triticum turgidum subsp. dicoccoides: A more modern, alternative scientific synonym.
  • Emmer wheat (Triticum dicoccum): The cultivated descendant of this wild species.
  • Domestication: The process through which wild plants like were developed into cultivated crops.
Synonyms
  • Wild emmer
Different Meanings

This term has only one specific meaning: it refers to this particular botanical subspecies of wild wheat. It does not have general or figurative meanings.

Noun
  1. found wild in Palestine; held to be prototype of cultivated wheat