catanum

Etymology
, due to its not being mentioned by Imperial Era botanical or agricultural authors and being continued in only comparatively early Romanized  and theorized to have died out elsewhere by the end of the 1st century BCE but brought there in the century before that by  settlers and having been derived from, which is the semantic equivalent of Latin  and thus as an etymological equivalent of  preserves its literal meaning “spiky”, with the suffix as in the tree-names  and , which is formally possible as Sabine had not weakened the penultimate vowel in proparoxytones of this kind. Note the name of the related species, , and even the genus name is formally marked as Sabine. Otherwise a  borrowing, of the same Semitic origin as, thus a from Greek and of 🇨🇬 from Arabic. To 🇨🇬 respectively 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬 there is no way in either direction.

Noun

 * 1) western prickly juniper, cade
 * 2) * 690–750, Excerpta ex libro glossarum published in the Corpus glossariorum latinorum V page 179, 6
 * "la"

- Citisum genus arboris quasi catanum erba odoribera uergilius et uix humiles apibus casias rorem que