n
An evergreen alpine shrub, taxonomic name Rhododendron ferrugineum
n
(herbs) A low-growing, moisture-loving species of geranium with leaves that have a powdery texture and a sweet fragrance resembling apples, Pelargonium odoratissimum
n
Alternative form of Atamasco lily [The rain lily (Zephyranthes atamasco).]
n
Alternative form of Atamasco lily [The rain lily (Zephyranthes atamasco).]
n
A herb derived from any of certain shrubs of the family Lauraceae and Myrtaceae.
n
A plant of the genus Iresine that has colored leaves.
n
The downy seed head of a dandelion, a dandelion clock.
n
Alternative form of blueblossom [An evergreen shrub, Ceanothus thyrsiflorus, endemic to Oregon and California.]
n
A cornflower, a plant that grows in grain fields, Centaurea cyanus, with blue flowers resembling bottles.
n
Any of several South American flowering shrubs or lianas, of the genus Bougainvillea, having three showy, colorful bracts attached below each group of three inconspicuous flowers.
n
Any of various low plants, mostly parasitic on roots, such as the beechdrops, the squawroot, etc.
n
(with plural cloverleaves) The leaf of a clover plant
n
Any brassica of the genus Clypeola
n
A low spreading plant with yellow flowers and clover-like leaves, Oxalis stricta.
n
(UK, dialect) The plant borage itself.
n
A large shrub, Calotropis gigantea, growing up to 4 meters tall, with clusters of waxy flowers that are either white or lavender in color.
n
(UK, dialect, Yorkshire) The red poppy.
n
Any of various flowering plants, of the genus Cyclamen, widely cultivated as a houseplant, having decorative leaves and solitary flowers.
n
Obsolete spelling of daffodil [A bulbous plant of the genus Narcissus, with yellow flowers and a trumpet shaped corona, especially Narcissus pseudonarcissus, the national flower of Wales.]
n
A bulbous plant of the genus Narcissus, with yellow flowers and a trumpet shaped corona, especially Narcissus pseudonarcissus, the national flower of Wales.
n
Mercurialis perennis, a herbaceous, downy perennial woodland plant with erect stems bearing simple, serrate leaves, found in much of Europe.
n
Any of various small trees of the genus Cornus, especially the wild cornel and the flowering cornel
n
(uncountable) A herbal medicine extracted from the roots and seeds of such plants.
n
Any of various plants in the Liliaceae genus Erythronium, also called trout lily and dog's tooth violet.
n
Alternative form of fawn lily [Any of various plants in the Liliaceae genus Erythronium, also called trout lily and dog's tooth violet.]
n
Silene virginica, a brilliant red wildflower of eastern North America in the family Caryophyllaceae.
n
Any one of several trees or shrubs with yellow or bright red flowers, such as Rhododendron arboreum, Brachychiton acerifolium, or Delonix regia.
n
Any of several plants, of the genus Mirabilis, whose funnel-shaped flowers open in late afternoon.
n
Any plant of the taxonomic genus Fumaria of annual herbaceous flowering plants in the family Papaveraceae, native to temperate Europe and Asia.
n
The short-styled female flower of certain figs.
n
A daisy of the genus Gerbera.
n
Alternative spelling of gillyflower [Clove pink.]
n
Alternative spelling of gillyflower [Clove pink.]
n
Any of various flowering plants in the genus Orchidaceae.
n
(US) Any plant in the genus Lagophylla- annual flowers of the western US having leaves covered by dense, soft hairs reminiscent of a rabbit's fur.
n
A flowering plant (Medicago arabica) in the pea and bean family Fabaceae native to the Mediterranean basin but now found throughout the world.
n
Alternative spelling of heartleaf [Wild ginger, Asarum caudatum]
n
Alternative form of heartsease (“wild pansy”) [A common European wild flower, Viola tricolor; the wild pansy.]
n
Any of various plants with heart-shaped leaves, such as the Houttuynia cordata.
n
An unidentified plant with yellow flowers, anciently used in garlands.
n
(obsolete) A type of root, probably from a plant of the genus Colchicum, as imported and used in Western medicine.
n
Alternative spelling of ice plant [A succulent annual, Mesembryanthemum crystallinum, of the fig marigold family, having pale pink flowers and fleshy leaves covered with glistening water vesicles.]
n
The dried root of such a plant used as a stimulant.
n
Any of several plants, of the genus Jasminum, mostly native to Asia, having fragrant white or yellow flowers.
n
Alternative form of jasmine [Any of several plants, of the genus Jasminum, mostly native to Asia, having fragrant white or yellow flowers.]
n
Alternative form of jonquil [A fragrant bulb flower (Narcissus jonquilla), a species of daffodil.]
n
Alternative spelling of gillyflower [Clove pink.]
n
A plant, the cuckooflower (Cardamine pratensis).
n
A cactus of either of two genera in the family Cactaceae: Epiphyllum and Pereskia.
n
A low spreading plant with yellow flowers and clover-like leaves, Oxalis stricta.
n
A flower of the lilac shrub.
n
Alternative form of fluellin [(obsolete) Any of various varieties of Veronica, especially Veronica officinalis; speedwell.]
n
Various species in the genus Ligusticum (generally with an adjective to differentiate them from Levisticum)
n
Any of the New World plants, of the genus Tagetes, with orange, yellow or reddish flowers.
n
Alternative spelling of meadow saffron [Colchicum autumnale, a fall-blooming colchicum.]
n
A fragrant plant of the genus Melilotus, often having small yellow or white flowers.
n
Aster amellus, a flowering plant; a flower of the plant.
n
Medicago arborea, a plant with yellow flowers.
n
Synonym of mossy saxifrage
n
A forget-me-not (genus Myosotis).
n
(US) Any plant in the North American composite genus Wyethia, with woolly leaves and sunflower-like flowers.
n
The hardy rose Rosa multiflora
n
A plant of the species Rosa multiflora, native to East Asia, considered invasive in the US.
n
Any of several bulbous flowering plants, of the genus Narcissus, having white or yellow cup- or trumpet-shaped flowers, notably the daffodil
n
The corn camomile (Anthemis arvensis).
n
The plant Primula elatior, similar to cowslip but with larger, pale yellow flowers.
n
A plant, Bougainvillea glabra, and its flower head, so called for the papery bracts.
n
A bulbous perennial, Narcissus papyraceus, native to the Mediterranean region, with fragrant bunches of white flowers.
n
Any of the genus Anaphalis of flowering plants.
n
Adonis annua, a plant with bright red flowers
n
A plant (Rheum rhaponticum) whose acid leafstalks are used in making pies; the garden rhubarb.
n
A flowering plant in the genus Leucospermum.
n
flowers in the family Caryophyllaceae, sometimes called carnations.
n
Obsolete form of peony. [A flowering plant of the genus Paeonia with large fragrant flowers.]
n
Obsolete form of peony. [A flowering plant of the genus Paeonia with large fragrant flowers.]
n
A whitish woolly plant (Teucrium polium) of the family Labiatae, found throughout the Mediterranean.
n
(chiefly Australia, Britain, Canada) A simple artificial poppy flower worn in a buttonhole or displayed in other contexts to remember those who died in the two World Wars and other armed conflicts, especially around Remembrance Day/Remembrance Sunday.
n
The seedhead of a poppy.
n
(horticulture) Any of many tropical trailing herbs, of the genus Portulaca, having showy flowers
n
(uncountable, botany) Pothos, a genus of plants consisting of subtropical and tropical, climbing, flowering vines, indigenous to the environs of the Indian Ocean and western Pacific Ocean.
n
A flowering plant of the genus Primula.
n
The two-flowered narcissus (Narcissus × medioluteus).
n
Alternative form of cinquefoil [A potentilla (flower).]
n
A clover, Trifolium pratense, with red flowers, found in Europe, Asia and North America.
n
(informal) A rhododendron.
n
Any plant of the genus Rheum, especially Rheum rhabarbarum, having large leaves and long green or reddish acidic leafstalks that are edible, in particular when cooked (although the leaves are mildly poisonous).
n
especially, any species of the genus Helianthemum, low shrubs or herbs with yellow flowers, especially the European Helianthemum nummularium (syn. Helianthum vulgare and the American frostweed, Helianthum canadense.
n
Alternative spelling of rose mallow [Any of various flowering plants in the genus Hibiscus.]
n
Alternative spelling of sabbatia [A plant of Sabatia, a genus of smooth slender North American herbs (family Gentianaceae) with opposite leaves and showy white or rose-pink cymose flowers.]
n
Alternative form of salsify [(countable, uncountable) Any of several flowering plants, of the genus Tragopogon, most of which have purple flowers.]
n
The leaf of such a plant.
n
Any of a genus, Spermolepis, of American herbs of the carrot family.
n
(pharmacology) A bulb of Urginea scilla.
n
The flowering plant Sabatia stellaris.
n
A common flowering plant in the pea family Fabaceae, native to grasslands in temperate Eurasia and North Africa.
n
Any of several species of small clover-like plant species, with trefoil leaves, especially Trifolium repens.
n
Rare spelling of spignel. [Meum athamanticum, an ornamental plant in the Apiaceae family found in mountain areas in Central and Western Europe, with roots and feathery leaves used as food and for medicinal purposes.]
n
The lady's smock or cuckooflower.
n
Alternative form of spirea [Any of the many flowering shrubs of the genus Spiraea, that have clusters of white or pink flowers.]
n
Magnolia stellata, a slow-growing shrub or small tree native to Japan, with large, showy white or pink flowers.
n
Trifolium subterraneum, a geocarpous clover.
n
Alternative spelling of sulphurwort [the plant hog fennel (Peucedanum officinale)]
adj
Covered with sunflowers.
n
(rare) Alternative form of sweet gale [An herbal shrub with a sweet resinous scent, Myrica gale, growing on moors and fens.]
n
Any plant of the genus Stevia, from which stevia is extracted.
n
A plant of the genus Itea.
n
Synonym of tagetes (“individual plant of the genus Tagetes”).
n
Any of the genus Taxodium of flood-tolerant conifers in the cypress family.
n
A bulbous flowering plant, Lilium lancifolium, with a large spectacular flower and a edible bulb.
n
A gazania, any flowers of the genus Gazania, flowering plants found in Southern Africa, especially Gazania rigens.
n
The flower of this plant.
n
A variety of early flowering, fragrant daffodil.
n
Any pink of the genus Vaccaria.
n
An extract of the dried roots of the Valeriana officinalis used in herbal medicine as a sedative.
n
Alternative form of veratrine [A poisonous mixture of alkaloids (veratridines) obtained from the seeds of the sabadilla plant.]
n
(botany) A flower of the genus Veronica, usually having blue petals.
n
Obsolete spelling of vervain [Any herbaceous plant in the genus Verbena especially if used for medicinal purposes, primarily Verbena officinalis, common in Europe and formerly held to have medicinal properties.]
n
(botany) Any of several flowering plants, of the genus Viola, including the violets and pansies.
n
A tropical plant (Talinum fruticosum), the leaves of which are eaten as a vegetable.
adj
(botany) Characteristic of a plant that grows rapidly and spreads invasively, and which grows opportunistically in cracks of sidewalks and disturbed areas.
n
(phytopathology) Wood with a darkened or wet appearance resulting from abnormally high water content or a bacterial infection.
n
A species of clover, Trifolium repens, native to much of Europe, North Africa and parts of Asia and introduced elsewhere as a pasture crop.
n
A plant, the scarlet pimpernel.
n
(obsolete) Any evergreen plant.
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