English words for 'Anolis carolinensis.'
Closest matches for "Anolis carolinensis." are ranked by semantic fit across dictionary definitions.
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noun
- Anchusa officinalis (common bugloss), a similar plant.
- Anchusa ochroleuca (yellow alkanet).
- Alkanna tinctoria, a plant whose root is used as a red dye.
- Puccoon (Sanguinaria canadensis).
- The dyeing matter extracted from the roots of the plant with water or oil, used for cotton especially but also silk and wool, giving a deep red colour.
- Other plants of the genus Alkanna.
- Cynoglottis barrelieri (syn. Anchusa barrelieri, false alkanet).
- Pentaglottis sempervirens (green alkanet), a blue-flowered plant with evergreen leaves.
- Lithospermum arvense (bastard alkanet or field gromwell).
- perennial or biennial herb cultivated for its delicate usually blue flowers
noun
- A flowering plant of the genus Anchusa, especially Anchusa officinalis (true alkanet).
- A flowering plant of the genus Picris, especially Picris echioides (bristly oxtongue).
- Beef tongue (a foodstuff).
- widespread European weed with spiny tongue-shaped leaves and yellow flowers; naturalized in United States
noun
- Anodontostoma chacunda (Chacunda gizzard shad)
- Nematalosa galatheae (Galathea gizzard shad)
- Dorosoma anale (Mexician river gizzard shad)
- Nematalosa vlaminghi (Western Australian gizzard shad)
- Konosirus punctatus (Konoshiro gizzard shad )
- Gonialosa manmina (Ganges gizzard shad)
- Dorosoma cepedianum (American gizzard shad)
- Nematalosa come (Western Pacific gizzard shad)
- Clupanodon thrissa (Chinese gizzard shad)
- Nematalosa nasus (Bloch's gizzard shad)
- Anodontostoma thailandiae (Thai gizzard shad)
noun
- any woodland plant of the genus Anemone grown for its beautiful flowers and whorls of dissected leaves
- marine polyps that resemble flowers but have oral rings of tentacles; differ from corals in forming no hard skeleton
- Any plant of the genus Anemone, of the Ranunculaceae (or buttercup) family, such as the windflower.
- A sea anemone.
noun
- common anemone of eastern North America with solitary pink-tinged white flowers
- Alternative letter-case form of Snowdrop (“a Royal Air Force police officer”).
- Any of the 20 species of the genus Galanthus of the Amaryllidaceae, bulbous flowering plants, bearing a solitary, pendulous, white, bell-shaped flower that appears, depending on species, between autumn and late winter or early spring, all native to temperate Eurasia.
verb
noun
- Anomis sabulifera (jute semi-looper)
- Anomis flava (cotton semi-looper)
- Chrysodeixis acuta (tomato semi-looper)
- Chrysodeixis chalcites (groundnut semi-looper)
- Argyrogramma signata (green semi-looper)
- Oxyodes scrobiculata (longan semi-looper)
- Achaea janata (castor semi-looper)
- Trigonodes hyppasia (triangles)
noun
- Osmorhiza longistylis (aniseroot)
- Ligusticum verticillatum (northern licorice root
- Ligusticum grayi (Gray's licorice root)
- Ligusticum apiifolium (celery-leaf licorice root)
- Ligusticum canadense (Canadian licorice root)
- Ligusticum tenuifolium (Idaho 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)
- Ligusticum calderi (Calder's licorice root)
- (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
- An umbelliferous plant (Pimpinella anisum) growing naturally in Egypt, and cultivated in Spain, Malta, etc., for its carminative and aromatic seeds, which are used as a spice. It has a licorice scent.
- (US, often qualified as "sweet anise" or "wild anise") Fennel, Foeniculum vulgare.
- liquorice-flavored seeds, used medicinally and in cooking and liquors
- native to Egypt but cultivated widely for its aromatic seeds and the oil from them used medicinally and as a flavoring in cookery
noun
- Anchusa officinalis (common bugloss), a similar plant.
- Anchusa ochroleuca (yellow alkanet).
- Alkanna tinctoria, a plant whose root is used as a red dye.
- Puccoon (Sanguinaria canadensis).
- The dyeing matter extracted from the roots of the plant with water or oil, used for cotton especially but also silk and wool, giving a deep red colour.
- Other plants of the genus Alkanna.
- Cynoglottis barrelieri (syn. Anchusa barrelieri, false alkanet).
- Pentaglottis sempervirens (green alkanet), a blue-flowered plant with evergreen leaves.
- Lithospermum arvense (bastard alkanet or field gromwell).
- perennial or biennial herb cultivated for its delicate usually blue flowers
noun
- A flowering plant of the genus Anchusa, especially Anchusa officinalis (true alkanet).
- A flowering plant of the genus Picris, especially Picris echioides (bristly oxtongue).
- Beef tongue (a foodstuff).
- widespread European weed with spiny tongue-shaped leaves and yellow flowers; naturalized in United States
noun
- Anodontostoma chacunda (Chacunda gizzard shad)
- Nematalosa galatheae (Galathea gizzard shad)
- Dorosoma anale (Mexician river gizzard shad)
- Nematalosa vlaminghi (Western Australian gizzard shad)
- Konosirus punctatus (Konoshiro gizzard shad )
- Gonialosa manmina (Ganges gizzard shad)
- Dorosoma cepedianum (American gizzard shad)
- Nematalosa come (Western Pacific gizzard shad)
- Clupanodon thrissa (Chinese gizzard shad)
- Nematalosa nasus (Bloch's gizzard shad)
- Anodontostoma thailandiae (Thai gizzard shad)
noun
- any woodland plant of the genus Anemone grown for its beautiful flowers and whorls of dissected leaves
- marine polyps that resemble flowers but have oral rings of tentacles; differ from corals in forming no hard skeleton
- Any plant of the genus Anemone, of the Ranunculaceae (or buttercup) family, such as the windflower.
- A sea anemone.
noun
- common anemone of eastern North America with solitary pink-tinged white flowers
- Alternative letter-case form of Snowdrop (“a Royal Air Force police officer”).
- Any of the 20 species of the genus Galanthus of the Amaryllidaceae, bulbous flowering plants, bearing a solitary, pendulous, white, bell-shaped flower that appears, depending on species, between autumn and late winter or early spring, all native to temperate Eurasia.
verb
noun
- Anomis sabulifera (jute semi-looper)
- Anomis flava (cotton semi-looper)
- Chrysodeixis acuta (tomato semi-looper)
- Chrysodeixis chalcites (groundnut semi-looper)
- Argyrogramma signata (green semi-looper)
- Oxyodes scrobiculata (longan semi-looper)
- Achaea janata (castor semi-looper)
- Trigonodes hyppasia (triangles)
noun
- Osmorhiza longistylis (aniseroot)
- Ligusticum verticillatum (northern licorice root
- Ligusticum grayi (Gray's licorice root)
- Ligusticum apiifolium (celery-leaf licorice root)
- Ligusticum canadense (Canadian licorice root)
- Ligusticum tenuifolium (Idaho 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)
- Ligusticum calderi (Calder's licorice root)
- (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
- An umbelliferous plant (Pimpinella anisum) growing naturally in Egypt, and cultivated in Spain, Malta, etc., for its carminative and aromatic seeds, which are used as a spice. It has a licorice scent.
- (US, often qualified as "sweet anise" or "wild anise") Fennel, Foeniculum vulgare.
- liquorice-flavored seeds, used medicinally and in cooking and liquors
- native to Egypt but cultivated widely for its aromatic seeds and the oil from them used medicinally and as a flavoring in cookery
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