What is the meaning of BANA. Phrases containing BANA
See meanings and uses of BANA!BANA
BANA
BANA
BANA
BANA
BANA
Acronyms & AI meanings
Management Education Units
Promoting Assets Across Cultures
Top Notch Snipers
State Wide Variety Testing
Consultative Committee for Programme Development and Management
Center for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Technologies
Carl M. Freeman Retail
Power Technologies Inc
Toeristisch Bureau Altena Biesbosch
BANA
BANA
BANA
n.
The territory governed by a ban.
n.
A genus of perennial, herbaceous, endogenous plants of great size, including the banana (Musa sapientum), the plantain (M. paradisiaca of Linnaeus, but probably not a distinct species), the Abyssinian (M. Ensete), the Philippine Island (M. textilis, which yields Manila hemp), and about eighteen other species. See Illust. of Banana and Plantain.
n.
Any one of numerous species of small passerine birds native of tropical America. See Banana quit, under Banana, and Guitguit.
n.
A perennial herbaceous plant of almost treelike size (Musa sapientum); also, its edible fruit. See Musa.
n.
A genus of plants related to the banana.
a.
Of or pertaining to a natural order of plants (Scitamineae), mostly tropical herbs, including the ginger, Indian shot, banana, and the plants producing turmeric and arrowroot.
n.
Something commonplace, hackneyed, or trivial; the commonplace, in speech.
a.
Commonplace; trivial; hackneyed; trite.
pl.
of Banality
n.
A genus of plants related to the banana, found at the Cape of Good Hope. They have rigid glaucous distichous leaves, and peculiar richly colored flowers.
n.
A plant which increases in size by internal growth and elongation at the summit, having the wood in the form of bundles or threads, irregularly distributed throughout the whole diameter, not forming annual layers, and with no distinct pith. The leaves of the endogens have, usually, parallel veins, their flowers are mostly in three, or some multiple of three, parts, and their embryos have but a single cotyledon, with the first leaves alternate. The endogens constitute one of the great primary classes of plants, and included all palms, true lilies, grasses, rushes, orchids, the banana, pineapple, etc. See Exogen.
a.
Crossbarred, as the ducts in a banana stem.
BANA
BANA