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Its stem and leaves resemble the plant called Phousor original: fūsūr; likely referring to Peucedanos or Hog's Fennel. It has a root that is soft to the touch, oblong in shape, pleasant-smelling, and delicious to the taste. When it is drunk with wine, it is beneficial for cramps of the uterus and for flatulence flatulence: gurgling or gas in the stomach and intestines.
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And for shortness of breath. If it is placed in the bowels and he has taken it twice, its expulsion? benefits him. Some claim that drinking it two or three times with wine during sleep, in a time of air epidemic original: wabā’ al-hawā’; referring to the historical "miasma" theory where diseases were thought to be spread by "bad air" from which the plague arises, provides protection. Through it, nothing of the corruption of the air shall affect his body.
And they call it Erigeron
A detailed botanical illustration of a plant. It features a horizontal central stem from which three smaller leafy branches grow upwards and three grow downwards. The leaves are small, green, and arranged in opposite pairs (pinnate). Interspersed among these branches are four curved, elongated structures colored in yellow with brownish outlines, possibly representing seed pods or flower spikes. On the right side, the stem ends in a thick, brownish root system with several thin rootlets extending from it.
Some people call it Malighos original: mālīghus; likely the Greek Meleagris. It is a plant that is renewed renewed: an annual plant that grows back each year from seed every year. It is used as fuel for fire, and its height is about—