「Pithecellobium dulce (blackbead)」のEnglishの単語
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noun
- Pithecellobium dulce (blackbead)
- Senna petersiana (dwarf cassia)
- Lecythis ollaria (coco de mono)
- Couroupita nicaraguarensis (syn. Lecythis nicaraguarensis) (coco de mono)
- Albizia saman, a flowering tree in the pea family, native to the neotropics.
- large ornamental tropical American tree with bipinnate leaves and globose clusters of flowers with crimson stamens and seed pods that are eaten by cattle
noun
- Black cumin of family Apiaceae. (Bunium bulbocastanum).
- Certain rushpeas, particularly Hoffmannseggia glauca (syn. Hoffmannseggia densiflora) Indian rushpea, of the Fabaceae.
- A plant of species Mesosphaerum suaveolens (syn. Hyptis suaveolens), of family Lamiaceae.
- (UK) A tuberous plant of family Apiaceae (Conopodium majus).
- (US) A pignut or hickory tree (Carya glabra of family Juglandaceae).
noun
- Balsamocarpon brevifolium
- (by transfer) Shrubs and trees that yield this product, especially:
- Astringent resinous husks and seeds of several species of leguminous trees or shrubs of South America, which are an article of commerce for their value in tanning and dyeing
- mesquite pod used in tanning and dyeing
noun
- A poisonous and medicinal plant, Helleborus niger.
- Another similarly poisonous and medicinal plant, the black false hellebore, Veratrum nigrum.
- slightly hairy perennial having deep green leathery leaves and flowers that are ultimately purplish-green
- European evergreen plant with white or purplish rose-like winter-blooming flowers
noun
- Bistorta officinalis (common bistort)
- Plantago major
- Rauvolfia serpentina (Indian snakeroot).
- Eryngium cuneifolium
- Asarum canadense (Canadian snakeroot)
- Eupatorium spp.
- Polygala senega (Seneca snakeroot)
- Any member of the genus Ageratina of perennials and rounded shrubs from the sunflower family, growing mainly in the warmer regions of the Americas.
- Aristolochia serpentaria (Virginia snakeroot)
- any of various North American plants of the genus Liatris having racemes or panicles of small discoid flower heads
- a plant of the genus Sanicula having palmately compound leaves and unisexual flowers in panicled umbels followed by bristly fruit; reputed to have healing powers
noun
- Paubrasilia echinata
- Astronium spp.
- Gordonia haematoxylon
- Heritiera spp.
- Terminalia canescens
- Cordia subcordata
- Combretum imberbe
- Sideroxylon spp.
- Myracrodruon urundeuva
- Dialium guianense
- Schleichera oleosa
- Cyrilla racemiflora
- Sloania spp.
- Jacquinia keyensis
- Carpinus caroliniana
- Foresteria pubescens
- Casuarina cristata
- Afzelia africana
- Chionanthus caymanensis
- Gymnostoma sumatranum
- Aegiphilia martinicensis
- Prunus africana
- (Australia) Acacia esthrophiolata, Acacia excelsa, Acacia melanoxylon, Acacia stenophylla, or Erythrophleum chlorostachys.
- Metrosideros spp.
- Backhousia myrtifolia
- Thouina striata
- Schinopsis spp.
- Cliftonia monophylla
- Swartzia spp.
- Exothea paniculata
- Vachellia farnesiana
- Colubrina elliptica
- Senegalia muricata
- exceptionally tough or hard wood of any of a number of ironwood trees
- medium-sized hop hornbeam of eastern North America
- a small slow-growing deciduous tree of northern Iran having a low domed shape
- handsome East Indian evergreen tree often planted as an ornamental for its fragrant white flowers that yield a perfume; source of very heavy hardwood used for railroad ties
noun
noun
- Bursaria spinosa (Australian blackthorn)
- Pittosporum undulatum (sweet pittosporum), of Australia
- Styrax americanus (American snowbell)
- Pittosporum tobira, native to China, Japan, and Korea, and naturalized and cultivated elsewhere
- Philadelphus lewisii (Lewis' mock-orange), of western North America
- especially, Philadelphus coronarius (sweet mock orange), widely cultivated
- Murraya paniculata (orange jessamine), a small tree ranging from East Asia to Australasia
- Maclura pomifera (Osage orange), of North America
noun
- Black cohosh (Actaea racemosa)
- Fremont’s leather flower (Clematis fremontii), a flowering plant in the buttercup family found in the United States.
- Cobwebby wild indigo (Baptisia arachnifera), an endangered legume native to the United States.
- Desert senna (Senna covesii), a perennial subshrub native to the United States and Mexico.
- Any plant of the genus Astragalus. of milkvetches.
- Rattlepod (Crotalaria retusa), a flowering legume native to tropical Asia, Africa, and Australia.
noun
- Lagenaria siceraria (syn. Cucurbita verrucosa), calabash, long-neck squash.
- (uncountable) A sport played in a walled court with a soft rubber ball and bats like tennis racquets.
- Cucurbita maxima, including hubbard squash, great winter squash, buttercup squash, and some varieties of pumpkins.
- (slang, professional wrestling) An extremely one-sided, usually short, match.
- Cucurbita argyrosperma (syn. Cucurbita mixta), cushaw squash.
- Cucurbita pepo, most pumpkins, acorn squash, summer squash, zucchini.
- (biology) A preparation made by placing material on a slide (flat, rectangular piece of glass), covering it and applying pressure.
- (cooking) The edible or decorative fruit of these plants, or this fruit prepared as a dish.
- A non-alcoholic drink made from a fruit-based concentrate diluted with water or milk.
- A place or a situation where people have limited space to move.
- Cucurbita moschata, butternut squash, Barbary squash, China squash.
- (botany) Any other similar-looking plant of other genera.
- a game played in an enclosed court by two or four players who strike the ball with long-handled rackets
- any of numerous annual trailing plants of the genus Cucurbita grown for their fleshy edible fruits
- edible fruit of a squash plant; eaten as a vegetable
verb
noun
- (Southern US) Any pale bean with a black spot.
- An African leguminous plant, of the species Vigna unguiculata, widely cultivated as food and forage, specifically Vigna unguiculata subsp. unguiculata.
- The edible seed of these plants.
- sprawling Old World annual cultivated especially in southern United States for food and forage and green manure
- eaten fresh as shell beans or dried
- fruit or seed of the cowpea plant
noun
- Bistorta officinalis (common bistort).
- Any of various not closely related plants reputed to cure snakebite.
- Any of genus Gutierrezia of poisonous American plants; matchweed.
- low-growing sticky subshrub of southwestern United States having narrow linear leaves on many slender branches and hundreds of tiny yellow flower heads
noun
noun
- Any plant of the genus Ballota.
- especially, a herb of species (Marrubium vulgare, of the mint family, traditionally used as a cough remedy and to make a type of hard candy.
- Any plant of the genus Marrubium.
- any of various aromatic herbs of the genus Marrubium
- a candy that is flavored with an extract of the horehound plant
noun
- The small, astringent, wild fruit of the blackthorn (Prunus spinosa).
- The tree Prunus spinosa.
- Any of various other plants of the genus Prunus, as a shrub or small tree, Prunus alleghaniensis, bearing dark-purple fruit.
- a thorny Eurasian bush with plumlike fruits
- wild plum of northeastern United States having dark purple fruits with yellow flesh
- small sour dark purple fruit of especially the Allegheny plum bush
noun
- Baccharis halimifolia
- Sarcobatus vermiculatus (black greasewood, greasewood, seepwood)
- Any of the genus Atriplex of plants, especially Atriplex hortensis or Atriplex patula, found in dry habitats, that have edible leaves resembling spinach, including many desert and seashore plants and halophytes.
- any of various shrubby plants of the genus Atriplex that thrive in dry alkaline soil
noun
noun
- (chiefly Scotland) The soft fruit borne by the species Rubus fruticosus formed of a black (when ripe) cluster of drupelets.
- A cocktail of gin, lemon juice, and blackberry liqueur.
- Any thorny shrub.
- Any of many closely related thorny plants in the genus Rubus including the blackberry and likely not including the raspberry proper.
- (graph theory) A collection of mutually touching connected subgraphs, where two subgraphs touch if they share a vertex or each includes one endpoint of an edge.
- any of various rough thorny shrubs or vines
verb
noun
- The blackcurrant plant, Ribes nigrum; the flavor of its berries.
- A liqueur made from these berries, especially crème de cassis.
- (chiefly US) A wine flavor note, suggesting the fruity and full-bodied characteristics of the fruit; mostly referred to as simply blackcurrant in the UK, where the fruit is common.
noun
- Ligusticum apiifolium (celery-leaf licorice root)
- Ligusticum calderi (Calder's licorice root)
- Ligusticum tenuifolium (Idaho licorice root)
- Ligusticum verticillatum (northern licorice root
- Ligusticum grayi (Gray's licorice root)
- Ligusticum canadense (Canadian licorice root)
- Glycyrrhiza, especially Glycyrrhiza lepidota (American licorice)
- Ligusticum filicinum (fernleaf licorice root)
- Ligusticum canbyi (Canby's licorice root)
- Ligusticum californicum (California licorice root)
- Ligusticum porteri (Porter's licorice root)
- Osmorhiza longistylis (aniseroot)
- (US) The root of the liquorice plant, Glycyrrhiza glabra, from which a sweet flavoring with an anise scent is extracted.
- root of licorice used in flavoring e.g. candy and liqueurs and medicines
noun
- Bomarea edulis, an ornamental flowering plant bearing edible tubers.
- tropical vine having pink-and-yellow flowers spotted purple and edible roots sometimes boiled as a potato substitute; West Indies to northern South America
- tropical vine having umbels of small purple flowers and edible roots sometimes boiled as a potato substitute; Colombia
noun
- Brabejum stellatifolium, native to South Africa
- Sterculia foetida, native to the Old World tropics
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see wild, almond.
- A wild-growing almond tree (Prunus amygdalus, syn. Prunus dulcis), native to the Middle East and South Asia.
- Prunus fasciculata, native to the southwestern United States
- Irvingia malayana, native to southeast Asia
- Prunus turneriana, native to Papua New Guinea and Australia
noun
- a black candy flavored with the dried root of the licorice plant
- deep-rooted coarse-textured plant native to the Mediterranean region having blue flowers and pinnately compound leaves; widely cultivated in Europe for its long thick sweet roots
- (countable) A plant of species Glycyrrhiza glabra, or sometimes in North America, the related American licorice plant Glycyrrhiza lepidota.
- (uncountable) A type of candy made from that plant's dried root or its extract.
- (countable and uncountable) A black color, named after the licorice.
- (uncountable) A supposed aphrodisiac made in the past from dried roots of Glycyrrhiza glabra and Glycyrrhiza echinata.
- (uncountable, chemistry) A flavoring agent made from dried root portions of the aforementioned plant.
noun
- a black candy flavored with the dried root of the licorice plant
- deep-rooted coarse-textured plant native to the Mediterranean region having blue flowers and pinnately compound leaves; widely cultivated in Europe for its long thick sweet roots
- UK, Ireland, India, and South Africa standard spelling of licorice.
noun
- Helleborus niger (family Ranunculaceae, black lungwort)
- Verbascum thapsus (in family Scrophulariaceae, bullock's lungwort, cow's lungwort or clown's lungwort)
- Mertensia virginica (American lungwort, lungwort oysterleaf, smooth lungwort, tree lungwort)
- Hieracium murorum (in family Asteraceae, French lungwort or golden lungwort)
- Lobaria pulmonaria, syn. Stichta pulmonacea, (in family Lobariaceae, lungwort lichen, lung lichen, tree lungwort)
- Mertensia maritima (sea lungwort)
- Any of various European plants, of the genus Pulmonaria (family Boraginaceae), that were once used to treat respiratory disorders.
noun
- purplish-black wild grape of the eastern United States with tough skins that slip easily from the flesh; cultivated in many varieties
- native grape of northeastern United States; origin of many cultivated varieties e.g. Concord grapes
- The native eastern North American grape, Vitis labrusca, with many cultivars, of which the Concord grape is the most important.
- Vitis vulpina
noun
- Olea europaea subsp. cuspidata
- Bontia daphnoides (family Scrophulariaceae; bastard olive)
- Cartrema americana (syn. Osmanthus americanus; devilwood, American olive; family Elaeagnaceae)
- Nyssa aquatica, an American swamp-growing tree (family Cornaceae; water tupelo)
- Elaeagnus angustifolia (silver berry, oleaster, Persian olive)
- Olea europaea subsp. europaea (syn. Olea oleaster)
- Halesia carolina (family Styracaceae; Carolina silverbell, little silverbell)
- Elaeagnus latifolia (oleaster)
- erect shrub or climber of India and China with red olivelike fruit
noun
- bedstraw with sweetish roots
- North American plant similar to true licorice and having a root with similar properties
- European perennial
- Glycyrrhhiza lepidota, an herb, native to the Western US, related to licorice.
- Astragalus glycyphyllus, an herb native to Europe and West and Central Asia.
- Abrus precatorius, the rosary pea.
noun
- (India) A spice plant related to caraway and cumin, with dark seeds and an edible root, Bunium bulbocastanum
- A Middle-Eastern spice plant related to buttercups, Nigella sativa, with dark black, aromatic seeds.
- These seeds as spice.
- herb of the Mediterranean region having pungent seeds used like those of caraway
noun
- Pithecellobium dulce (blackbead)
- Senna petersiana (dwarf cassia)
- Lecythis ollaria (coco de mono)
- Couroupita nicaraguarensis (syn. Lecythis nicaraguarensis) (coco de mono)
- Albizia saman, a flowering tree in the pea family, native to the neotropics.
- large ornamental tropical American tree with bipinnate leaves and globose clusters of flowers with crimson stamens and seed pods that are eaten by cattle
noun
- Black cumin of family Apiaceae. (Bunium bulbocastanum).
- Certain rushpeas, particularly Hoffmannseggia glauca (syn. Hoffmannseggia densiflora) Indian rushpea, of the Fabaceae.
- A plant of species Mesosphaerum suaveolens (syn. Hyptis suaveolens), of family Lamiaceae.
- (UK) A tuberous plant of family Apiaceae (Conopodium majus).
- (US) A pignut or hickory tree (Carya glabra of family Juglandaceae).
noun
- Balsamocarpon brevifolium
- (by transfer) Shrubs and trees that yield this product, especially:
- Astringent resinous husks and seeds of several species of leguminous trees or shrubs of South America, which are an article of commerce for their value in tanning and dyeing
- mesquite pod used in tanning and dyeing
noun
- A poisonous and medicinal plant, Helleborus niger.
- Another similarly poisonous and medicinal plant, the black false hellebore, Veratrum nigrum.
- slightly hairy perennial having deep green leathery leaves and flowers that are ultimately purplish-green
- European evergreen plant with white or purplish rose-like winter-blooming flowers
noun
- Bistorta officinalis (common bistort)
- Plantago major
- Rauvolfia serpentina (Indian snakeroot).
- Eryngium cuneifolium
- Asarum canadense (Canadian snakeroot)
- Eupatorium spp.
- Polygala senega (Seneca snakeroot)
- Any member of the genus Ageratina of perennials and rounded shrubs from the sunflower family, growing mainly in the warmer regions of the Americas.
- Aristolochia serpentaria (Virginia snakeroot)
- any of various North American plants of the genus Liatris having racemes or panicles of small discoid flower heads
- a plant of the genus Sanicula having palmately compound leaves and unisexual flowers in panicled umbels followed by bristly fruit; reputed to have healing powers
noun
- Paubrasilia echinata
- Astronium spp.
- Gordonia haematoxylon
- Heritiera spp.
- Terminalia canescens
- Cordia subcordata
- Combretum imberbe
- Sideroxylon spp.
- Myracrodruon urundeuva
- Dialium guianense
- Schleichera oleosa
- Cyrilla racemiflora
- Sloania spp.
- Jacquinia keyensis
- Carpinus caroliniana
- Foresteria pubescens
- Casuarina cristata
- Afzelia africana
- Chionanthus caymanensis
- Gymnostoma sumatranum
- Aegiphilia martinicensis
- Prunus africana
- (Australia) Acacia esthrophiolata, Acacia excelsa, Acacia melanoxylon, Acacia stenophylla, or Erythrophleum chlorostachys.
- Metrosideros spp.
- Backhousia myrtifolia
- Thouina striata
- Schinopsis spp.
- Cliftonia monophylla
- Swartzia spp.
- Exothea paniculata
- Vachellia farnesiana
- Colubrina elliptica
- Senegalia muricata
- exceptionally tough or hard wood of any of a number of ironwood trees
- medium-sized hop hornbeam of eastern North America
- a small slow-growing deciduous tree of northern Iran having a low domed shape
- handsome East Indian evergreen tree often planted as an ornamental for its fragrant white flowers that yield a perfume; source of very heavy hardwood used for railroad ties
noun
noun
- Bursaria spinosa (Australian blackthorn)
- Pittosporum undulatum (sweet pittosporum), of Australia
- Styrax americanus (American snowbell)
- Pittosporum tobira, native to China, Japan, and Korea, and naturalized and cultivated elsewhere
- Philadelphus lewisii (Lewis' mock-orange), of western North America
- especially, Philadelphus coronarius (sweet mock orange), widely cultivated
- Murraya paniculata (orange jessamine), a small tree ranging from East Asia to Australasia
- Maclura pomifera (Osage orange), of North America
noun
- Black cohosh (Actaea racemosa)
- Fremont’s leather flower (Clematis fremontii), a flowering plant in the buttercup family found in the United States.
- Cobwebby wild indigo (Baptisia arachnifera), an endangered legume native to the United States.
- Desert senna (Senna covesii), a perennial subshrub native to the United States and Mexico.
- Any plant of the genus Astragalus. of milkvetches.
- Rattlepod (Crotalaria retusa), a flowering legume native to tropical Asia, Africa, and Australia.
noun
- Lagenaria siceraria (syn. Cucurbita verrucosa), calabash, long-neck squash.
- (uncountable) A sport played in a walled court with a soft rubber ball and bats like tennis racquets.
- Cucurbita maxima, including hubbard squash, great winter squash, buttercup squash, and some varieties of pumpkins.
- (slang, professional wrestling) An extremely one-sided, usually short, match.
- Cucurbita argyrosperma (syn. Cucurbita mixta), cushaw squash.
- Cucurbita pepo, most pumpkins, acorn squash, summer squash, zucchini.
- (biology) A preparation made by placing material on a slide (flat, rectangular piece of glass), covering it and applying pressure.
- (cooking) The edible or decorative fruit of these plants, or this fruit prepared as a dish.
- A non-alcoholic drink made from a fruit-based concentrate diluted with water or milk.
- A place or a situation where people have limited space to move.
- Cucurbita moschata, butternut squash, Barbary squash, China squash.
- (botany) Any other similar-looking plant of other genera.
- a game played in an enclosed court by two or four players who strike the ball with long-handled rackets
- any of numerous annual trailing plants of the genus Cucurbita grown for their fleshy edible fruits
- edible fruit of a squash plant; eaten as a vegetable
verb
noun
- (Southern US) Any pale bean with a black spot.
- An African leguminous plant, of the species Vigna unguiculata, widely cultivated as food and forage, specifically Vigna unguiculata subsp. unguiculata.
- The edible seed of these plants.
- sprawling Old World annual cultivated especially in southern United States for food and forage and green manure
- eaten fresh as shell beans or dried
- fruit or seed of the cowpea plant
noun
- Bistorta officinalis (common bistort).
- Any of various not closely related plants reputed to cure snakebite.
- Any of genus Gutierrezia of poisonous American plants; matchweed.
- low-growing sticky subshrub of southwestern United States having narrow linear leaves on many slender branches and hundreds of tiny yellow flower heads
noun
noun
- Any plant of the genus Ballota.
- especially, a herb of species (Marrubium vulgare, of the mint family, traditionally used as a cough remedy and to make a type of hard candy.
- Any plant of the genus Marrubium.
- any of various aromatic herbs of the genus Marrubium
- a candy that is flavored with an extract of the horehound plant
noun
- The small, astringent, wild fruit of the blackthorn (Prunus spinosa).
- The tree Prunus spinosa.
- Any of various other plants of the genus Prunus, as a shrub or small tree, Prunus alleghaniensis, bearing dark-purple fruit.
- a thorny Eurasian bush with plumlike fruits
- wild plum of northeastern United States having dark purple fruits with yellow flesh
- small sour dark purple fruit of especially the Allegheny plum bush
noun
- Baccharis halimifolia
- Sarcobatus vermiculatus (black greasewood, greasewood, seepwood)
- Any of the genus Atriplex of plants, especially Atriplex hortensis or Atriplex patula, found in dry habitats, that have edible leaves resembling spinach, including many desert and seashore plants and halophytes.
- any of various shrubby plants of the genus Atriplex that thrive in dry alkaline soil
noun
noun
- (chiefly Scotland) The soft fruit borne by the species Rubus fruticosus formed of a black (when ripe) cluster of drupelets.
- A cocktail of gin, lemon juice, and blackberry liqueur.
- Any thorny shrub.
- Any of many closely related thorny plants in the genus Rubus including the blackberry and likely not including the raspberry proper.
- (graph theory) A collection of mutually touching connected subgraphs, where two subgraphs touch if they share a vertex or each includes one endpoint of an edge.
- any of various rough thorny shrubs or vines
verb
noun
- The blackcurrant plant, Ribes nigrum; the flavor of its berries.
- A liqueur made from these berries, especially crème de cassis.
- (chiefly US) A wine flavor note, suggesting the fruity and full-bodied characteristics of the fruit; mostly referred to as simply blackcurrant in the UK, where the fruit is common.
noun
- Ligusticum apiifolium (celery-leaf licorice root)
- Ligusticum calderi (Calder's licorice root)
- Ligusticum tenuifolium (Idaho licorice root)
- Ligusticum verticillatum (northern licorice root
- Ligusticum grayi (Gray's licorice root)
- Ligusticum canadense (Canadian licorice root)
- Glycyrrhiza, especially Glycyrrhiza lepidota (American licorice)
- Ligusticum filicinum (fernleaf licorice root)
- Ligusticum canbyi (Canby's licorice root)
- Ligusticum californicum (California licorice root)
- Ligusticum porteri (Porter's licorice root)
- Osmorhiza longistylis (aniseroot)
- (US) The root of the liquorice plant, Glycyrrhiza glabra, from which a sweet flavoring with an anise scent is extracted.
- root of licorice used in flavoring e.g. candy and liqueurs and medicines
noun
- Bomarea edulis, an ornamental flowering plant bearing edible tubers.
- tropical vine having pink-and-yellow flowers spotted purple and edible roots sometimes boiled as a potato substitute; West Indies to northern South America
- tropical vine having umbels of small purple flowers and edible roots sometimes boiled as a potato substitute; Colombia
noun
- Brabejum stellatifolium, native to South Africa
- Sterculia foetida, native to the Old World tropics
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see wild, almond.
- A wild-growing almond tree (Prunus amygdalus, syn. Prunus dulcis), native to the Middle East and South Asia.
- Prunus fasciculata, native to the southwestern United States
- Irvingia malayana, native to southeast Asia
- Prunus turneriana, native to Papua New Guinea and Australia
noun
- a black candy flavored with the dried root of the licorice plant
- deep-rooted coarse-textured plant native to the Mediterranean region having blue flowers and pinnately compound leaves; widely cultivated in Europe for its long thick sweet roots
- (countable) A plant of species Glycyrrhiza glabra, or sometimes in North America, the related American licorice plant Glycyrrhiza lepidota.
- (uncountable) A type of candy made from that plant's dried root or its extract.
- (countable and uncountable) A black color, named after the licorice.
- (uncountable) A supposed aphrodisiac made in the past from dried roots of Glycyrrhiza glabra and Glycyrrhiza echinata.
- (uncountable, chemistry) A flavoring agent made from dried root portions of the aforementioned plant.
noun
- a black candy flavored with the dried root of the licorice plant
- deep-rooted coarse-textured plant native to the Mediterranean region having blue flowers and pinnately compound leaves; widely cultivated in Europe for its long thick sweet roots
- UK, Ireland, India, and South Africa standard spelling of licorice.
noun
- Helleborus niger (family Ranunculaceae, black lungwort)
- Verbascum thapsus (in family Scrophulariaceae, bullock's lungwort, cow's lungwort or clown's lungwort)
- Mertensia virginica (American lungwort, lungwort oysterleaf, smooth lungwort, tree lungwort)
- Hieracium murorum (in family Asteraceae, French lungwort or golden lungwort)
- Lobaria pulmonaria, syn. Stichta pulmonacea, (in family Lobariaceae, lungwort lichen, lung lichen, tree lungwort)
- Mertensia maritima (sea lungwort)
- Any of various European plants, of the genus Pulmonaria (family Boraginaceae), that were once used to treat respiratory disorders.
noun
- purplish-black wild grape of the eastern United States with tough skins that slip easily from the flesh; cultivated in many varieties
- native grape of northeastern United States; origin of many cultivated varieties e.g. Concord grapes
- The native eastern North American grape, Vitis labrusca, with many cultivars, of which the Concord grape is the most important.
- Vitis vulpina
noun
- Olea europaea subsp. cuspidata
- Bontia daphnoides (family Scrophulariaceae; bastard olive)
- Cartrema americana (syn. Osmanthus americanus; devilwood, American olive; family Elaeagnaceae)
- Nyssa aquatica, an American swamp-growing tree (family Cornaceae; water tupelo)
- Elaeagnus angustifolia (silver berry, oleaster, Persian olive)
- Olea europaea subsp. europaea (syn. Olea oleaster)
- Halesia carolina (family Styracaceae; Carolina silverbell, little silverbell)
- Elaeagnus latifolia (oleaster)
- erect shrub or climber of India and China with red olivelike fruit
noun
- bedstraw with sweetish roots
- North American plant similar to true licorice and having a root with similar properties
- European perennial
- Glycyrrhhiza lepidota, an herb, native to the Western US, related to licorice.
- Astragalus glycyphyllus, an herb native to Europe and West and Central Asia.
- Abrus precatorius, the rosary pea.
noun
- (India) A spice plant related to caraway and cumin, with dark seeds and an edible root, Bunium bulbocastanum
- A Middle-Eastern spice plant related to buttercups, Nigella sativa, with dark black, aromatic seeds.
- These seeds as spice.
- herb of the Mediterranean region having pungent seeds used like those of caraway
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