Vaginatum
Vaginatum is a Latin neuter adjective used as a specific epithet in the scientific names of plants. It is not the name of a genus or a single species; rather, it appears in the binomial names of multiple species across different genera. The epithet vaginatum derives from the Latin vagina, meaning sheath, and the neuter ending -atum, a form commonly used to describe a plant feature such as a prominent sheath or sheath-like structure.
One well-known example is Paspalum vaginatum, commonly called seashore paspalum, a warm-season turfgrass that tolerates saline
Because Latin epithet endings agree with the gender of the genus, vaginatum appears in neuter genera and
See also: botanical nomenclature, species epithet, Latin descriptors in scientific naming.