Folium (folii, n).
"Folium" means "leaf" in Latin.
The Latin word for "leaf" is folium (-i, n.).
The latin name for leaf-fingered gecko is Phyllodactylus lanei ( At least that is what I have learned.)
An apple leaf midge is a creature which is a pest to apple trees, Latin name Dasineura mali.
You're referring to the Greek word phyllon, which means "leaf". (The Latin equivalent is folium.)
Both. "Hydro-" is from the Greek word for water, hydor, while "foil" is from the Latin word for leaf, folium.
The petiole is the stalk of a leaf. Petiole itself is not a Latin word. It is derived from Latin, following a tortured path. The Latin word at the front of that path was 'pediculus', meaning 'little foot'.
"Foliated" comes from folium, which means "leaf."
A blue-sided leaf frog is a species of tree frog native to Costa Rica, Latin name Agalychnis annae.
The Latin name for the green maple leaf can refer to various species of maple trees, as the term "green maple leaf" is not specific. However, one common species is the Acer saccharinum, known as the silver maple, which has green leaves. Another example is Acer rubrum, or the red maple, which also features green leaves. The specific Latin name will depend on the particular type of maple tree being referenced.
Mint is an angiosperm.Mint leaf is part of a plant that is an angiosperm. Mentha is the Latin name for mint.
"Stipula" is a Latin word that can mean "straw" or "blade of grass." In English, it is often used in botanical terms to refer to the small, leaf-like structures at the base of a leaf stalk.