Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
Jada Chang
What's the difference between 'vine' and 'liana'?
What's the difference between 'vine' and 'liana'?
Are 'climbing plants' and 'creeping plants' both vines or lianas?
17 juil. 2010 04:25
Réponses · 3
1
To add to Nicholas' answer, one would never use "liana" in daily conversation. It's a botanical term. "Vine" serves for the general meaning.
18 juillet 2010
1
My understanding is that a liana is simply a tropical vine, according to various online dictionaries. "Liana" and "vine" are almost synomyms; they are both creeping/climbing plants. The only difference between these two words is that a liana characteristically grows in tropical places whereas a vine grows in any other type of environment. Thus,to put it another way, you could say that a liana is a type of vine, but a vine can be a liana only if it grows in a tropical environment.
To answer the second question, plants that are creeping (developing gradually over a period of time) or climbing (growing in an upward direction) are both representative of vines. If the creeping/climbing plant grows in a tropical setting, you can say it is a liana.
In short, it all depends on which environment the vine grows (tropical or non-tropical).
17 juillet 2010
vines include both herbaceous and woody plants, liana refers to a woody vine. Many are tropical, but poison ivy and grapes are examples of a liana in temperate environment.
28 août 2012
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Jada Chang
Compétences linguistiques
Chinois (mandarin), Chinois (cantonais), Anglais
Langue étudiée
Chinois (cantonais), Anglais
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