It has pinnate leaves with between 1 and 8 pairs of leaflets.
It has highly pinnate leaves which can vary in appearance and are reminiscent of parsley.
It is easily recognizable by its spreading stems, pinnate leaves, and biglobose fruits.
The plant has small, pinnate leaves, 7-10 cm long, normally composed of five or seven leaflets.
Most of the ash species have light-green, oval shaped, pinnate leaves.
Its pinnate leaves have 7 to 9 shining leaflets which turn bright red, yellow and purple in the fall.
They are large evergreen trees up to 40-50 m tall, with alternate, pinnate leaves.
It has dark green, pinnate leaves 15-40 cm long and 15-25 cm broad.
The species is unrelated to the true ash trees (genus Fraxinus), which also carry pinnate leaves.
It grows to between 0.5 and 1 metres high and has pinnate leaves.