montane
suomi-englanti sanakirjamontane englannista suomeksi
vuori-
Substantiivi
montane englanniksi
Of, inhabiting, or growing in mountain areas; specifically, the cool, moist upland slopes below the timberline. (defdate)
(quote-journal)&93;|journal=of Botany, British and Foreign|The Journal of Botany, British and Foreign|location=London|publisher=(w),(nb...)|month=January|year=1863|volume=I|page=12|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=YU4-AAAAcAAJ&pg=PA12|oclc=1170593834|passage=This plant evidently occupies, like ''V. sabulosa'' and ''V. Curtisii'', an intermediate position between ''lutea'' and ''tricolor''; and, as I have indicated already, it is a montane, not an agrestal plant. Jordan compares it to ''V. vivariensis'', which is also a montane plant, between ''V. tricolor'' and ''V. lutea''.
(quote-journal)|date=1 January 1871|volume=IX|page=261|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=AdUUAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA261|oclc=869622181|passage=The upper part of these peaks is very bare and monotonous, and almost destitute of damp precipice; and I know of only seven Montane species that grow there above 650 yards.
(quote-journal)|date=4 March 1875|volume=III (Third Series)|page=15|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=3WQ_AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA15|oclc=80987767|passage=With a like lower limit of level there are found on hills numerous Sub-alpine or Montane plants, which do not grow in the North. We must therefore divide the Northern zone also into three parts—1, ''Northern'' (restricted); 2, ''Northern-montane''; and 3, ''Montane'' only.
(quote-book)
(quote-book)|year=1999|isbn=978-1-85702-834-8|edition2=paperback|location2=New York, N.Y.|publisher2=Harper Perennial|year2=2000|page2=27|isbn2=978-0-06-089408-5|passage=The gorilla's ancestor had probably taken to the montane forests of a string of central African volcanoes, cutting itself off from the genes of other apes.
(quote-book)|year=1888|page=53|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=vqQ-AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA53|oclc=1153718738|passage=The true Montanes comprise those species, of unmistakably Alpine, Scottish, or Highland type, which not merely with us but elsewhere throughout Britain are characteristic of high latitudes and altitudes—of mountain regions only.
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