n
Any plant in the genus Ajuga, especially the ornamental ground cover Ajuga reptans.
n
many-seeded goosefoot (Lipandra polysperma, syn. Chenopodium polyspermum)
n
Any of the genus Alternanthera of herbaceous plants in the amaranth family.
n
Deschampsia antarctica, a flowering plant native to Antarctica.
n
(South Africa) Any of several cultivated species of grass in the genus Pennisetum.
n
Soleirolia soleirolii, a plant in the nettle family grown as a green, mossy groundcover.
n
Great Basin sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata)
n
Wild sage (Cordia spp.), especially Cordia curassavica (syn. Cordia macrostachya)
n
Carex glaucodea, native to North America.
n
Any of the numerous species of plants in genus Sisyrinchium, with grasslike leaves and blue or purple flowers.
n
The sedge Eriophorum angustifolium.
n
Carex scoparia (broom sedge).
n
Gymnoschoenus sphaerocephalus, a tussock-forming sedge from southeastern Australia.
n
The flowering plant Cassia fistula, the golden shower tree.
n
Any member of the genus Carex of sedges.
n
Any of several perennial herbs, of the genus Typha, that have long flat leaves, and grow in marshy places.
n
Tmesipteris, native to the South Pacific
n
(historical) an herb mentioned in Old English herbals, probably Ranunculus acris
n
(uncountable) peppergrass
n
A sedge species, Carex nigra (in Carex subg. Carex).
n
Filago, a plant genus of Eurasia and North America
n
A kind of grass, the heath club-rush, Trichophorum cespitosum.
n
Any of several reduced floating aquatic plants in the subfamily Lemnoideae of the family Araceae.
n
Vallisneria spp. in freshwater environments.
n
Cyperus laevigatus, a species of sedge.
n
Stipa tenacissima, of North Africa.
n
mullein (Verbascum gen. et spp.)
n
Nigella damascena, ragged lady
n
A type of poinsettia (Poinsettia heterophylla)
n
Any of various sedges in the genus Cyperus.
n
Alternative spelling of galangal [Any of several east Asian plants of genera Alpinia and Kaempferia in the ginger family, used as a spice, but principally Alpinia galanga.]
n
Species of the European genus Sarcocornia
n
A sedge species, Carex flacca (in Carex subg. Carex).
n
Euphorbia lathyris (caper spurge).
n
Richea pandanifolia (family Ericaceae), the giant grass tree.
n
Any weed that is a grass.
n
A plant of the species Scirpus atrovirens
n
Alternative form of hebenon [(now rare) A plant or flower used in the works of Gower, Shakespeare and Marlowe to make a poison.]
n
A plant with edible beans, native to southern India, Macrotyloma uniflorum (in older literature Dolichos uniflorus or Dolichos biflorus), grown as a minor food crop or as fodder for horses.
n
An aquatic plant, Hydrilla verticillata
n
Hyptis capitata, an erect annual lamiaceous shrub.
n
A coarse American composite weed, Polymnia uvedalia, now Smallanthus uvedalia.
n
species of Culcitium and Espeletia in Western South America
n
A plant in the taxonomic genus Equisetum (horsetails); Equisetum pratense.
n
Any of several similar pungent Eurasian herbs, of the genus Achillea
n
A sedge species, Carex limosa.
n
Any perennial sedge of species Cyperus esculentus or Cyperus rotundus, that has small edible nutlike tubers.
n
The chairmaker's bulrush (Schoenoplectus americanus).
n
Polygonum aviculare (common knotgrass)
n
(botany) Any of the genus Prangos of umbelliferous plants, one species of which has been used as cattle fodder.
n
A sedge species, Carex ericetorum (in Carex subg. Carex).
n
a grass plant, Festuca rubra, with green, red, or blue-green flowers, found in Europe, Asia and North America.
n
Any of several similar genera of flowering plants in the family Brassicaceae: Arabis, with primarily Old World species; Arabidopsis, with primarily European species; Cardaminopsis with primarily Old World species and Boechera, with primarily North American species.
n
Carex lurida (in Carex subg. Carex), native to eastern North America.
n
A species of blue-eyed grass, Olsynium douglasii (syn. Sisyrhinchium douglasii)
n
Any of several Cladium species, long sedges with saw-like sharp, serrated edges, such as Cladium californicum, Cladium jamaicense, and Cladium mariscoides
n
Any plant of the genus Carex, the true sedges, perennial, endogenous herbs, often growing in dense tufts in marshy places. They have triangular jointless stems, a spiked inflorescence, and long grasslike leaves which are usually rough on the margins and midrib. There are several hundred species.
n
A plant, the alpine bistort (Bistorta vivipara).
n
Any of several plants that have silvery leaves
n
A sedge species, Carex lasiocarpa (in Carex subg. Carex).
n
Carex conjuncta, native to north central and northeastern United States.
n
A plant of the species Juncus effusus, nearly worldwide in distribution, native over much of its current range, excluding Australia, Madagascar, and many islands.
n
Navajo spinach (Cleome serrulata)
n
Callitriche spp., flowering plants in the family Plantaginaceae.
n
A sedge species, Carex echinata.
n
The bur marigolds in the genus Bidens
n
The plant Dittrichia graveolens.
n
A sedge species, Carex chordorrhiza.
n
A tall species of reed, Phragmites karka, native to tropical Africa, Asia, and Australasia.
n
Any of the tufted grasses of genus Lolium; darnel.
n
Either of two goat's-beards (Tragopogon pratensis (meadow salsify) or Tragopogon porrifolius (common salsify); or (in later use) any other member of the genus Tragopogon.
n
Any of various grasses of the genus Trisetum.
n
A large grass native to the Falkland Islands, Poa flabellata, and remarkable for forming great tufts.
n
Schefflera actinophylla, the octopus tree.
n
Paspalum distichum, a weedy perennial grass of wet areas.
n
Hygrophila difformis, an aquatic acanthus found in marshy habitats on the Indian subcontinent, not closely related to the true wisteria.
n
Eremophila undulata, a species of eremophila plant in the figwort family.
n
(New Zealand) Several species of Lachnagrostis
n
Veronica hederifolia, a speedwell.
n
Linum sulcatum, grooved yellow flax, native to eastern North America
n
Alternative spelling of sacaton [A tufted perennial grass, Sporobolus airoides, grown in the southwestern United States and Mexico and used for hay and pasture in dry alkaline areas.]
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