Cyclamen intaminatum

Cyclamen intaminatum (= Cyclamen cilicium var. intaminatum) is a perennial growing from a tuber, native to oak woodland in scattered spots at 100–1,100 m (330–3,610 ft) in western Turkey. It is similar to Cyclamen cilicium, but smaller.

Cyclamen intaminatum
Scientific classification
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Binomial name
Cyclamen intaminatum
Synonyms

Cyclamen cilicium var. intaminatum Meikle

Etymology

The species is named intāminātum "undefiled",[1] from the stem of contāmen (= -tagmen) "pollution", from tangō "I touch",[2] because of the unmarked petals.

Description

Leaves are almost round and dark green variegated with silver.

Flowers are white to light pink, with no spot of darker color on the nose as in many other cyclamens.

gollark: You'll end up probably having to reinvent data structures from scratch - or use a library, except C has no proper generics anyway - and reimplement stuff which is simple in other languages.
gollark: Also, C is slower to develop with.
gollark: Fine, esolang or not, it doesn't really matter much.
gollark: Also also also, speed hardly matters for a prototype esolang.
gollark: Also, development speed is likely to be worse, and also also other languages exist.

References

  1. intāminātus. Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short. A Latin Dictionary on Perseus Project.
  2. Harper, Douglas. "contaminate". Online Etymology Dictionary.
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