protologue

English

Alternative forms

  • protologus

Etymology

Ancient Greek πρωτολόγος (prōtológos, speaking first)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpɹəʊtəʊlɒɡ/, /ˈpɹəʊtəlɒɡ/

Noun

protologue (plural protologues)

  1. (taxonomy) All the original material associated with a newly published name, comprising its description or diagnosis and any of a number of other elements such as illustrations, synonymy, etc.
    • 1987 July, Frederick Gustav Meyer, James W. Hardin, “Status of the name Aesculus flava Solander (Hippocastanaceae)” (pages 335–341), in S. A. Spongberg, E. B. Schmidt, P. S. Ashton, K. S. Bawa, P. F. Stevens, C. E. Wood, Jr., editors, Journal of the Arnold Arboretum, volume 68, number 3, Lawrence: Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, →ISSN, →JSTOR, pages 338339:
      This is important, since the brief protologus of A. flava published in the Edinburgh Catalogus included only the first four lines from Solander’s original manuscript (our translation of Solander’s protologue: “calyx ovate, half the length of the upper petal claws, blade cordate-subrotund, stamens curved”) and therefore was incomplete and is inadequate for typification.

Translations

French

Etymology

Ancient Greek πρωτολόγος (prōtológos, speaking first)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /pʁɔ.tɔ.lɔɡ/

Noun

protologue m (plural protologues)

  1. (taxonomy) protologue

Further reading

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