What is the meaning of FLOWERS. Phrases containing FLOWERS
See meanings and uses of FLOWERS!Slangs & AI meanings
n back yard. Americans use the word “garden” to refer to areas where fairly specific things are grown – flowers or vegetables, for example. Brits use the word to refer to the area behind their house which contains some grass, a long-since abandoned attempt at a rockery and a broken plastic tricycle.
Flowers. I forgot it was my anniversary, so I picked some aprils on the way home.
Flowers
Flowers and frolics is Irish rhyming slang for testicles (bollocks). Flowers and frolics is Irish rhyming slang for nonsense (bollocks).
Leisure hours is London Cockney rhyming slang for flowers.
rocks or ledges where the sea-water breaks
marijuana
Flowers
Flowers is slang for cannabis.
Verb. To impress or excite. E.g."I've made up my mind to wow her with a bunch of flowers and an expensive meal."
Noun. The testicles. Adj. 1. Mad, insane. 2. Enthusiastic, obsessed. E.g."Buys her flowers every week, makes all her meals, he's nuts about her,." Exclam. An exclamation of defiance or annoyance.
Tutty is Dorset slang for a nosegay of wild flowers.
to steal “did you nick these flowers?’
n. Dollars. Used mostly as a euphemism in prostitution circles. Sometimes also referred to as "flowers." "She said that she’d do whatever you wanted to for a donation of 100 roses."Â
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n.
A genus of aquatic plants named in honor of Queen Victoria. The Victoria regia is a native of Guiana and Brazil. Its large, spreading leaves are often over five feet in diameter, and have a rim from three to five inches high; its immense rose-white flowers sometimes attain a diameter of nearly two feet.
n.
A leguminous tree (Eperua falcata) of Demerara, with pinnate leaves and clusters of red flowers. The reddish brown wood is used for palings and shingles.
n.
A circle either of leaves or flowers about a stem at the same node; a whorl.
n.
Any plant or flower of the genus Viola, of many species. The violets are generally low, herbaceous plants, and the flowers of many of the species are blue, while others are white or yellow, or of several colors, as the pansy (Viola tricolor).
n.
One of the tubular florets in composite flowers.
n.
A perennial, cruciferous plant (Cheiranthus Cheiri), with sweet-scented flowers varying in color from yellow to orange and deep red. In Europe it very common on old walls.
n.
A genus of herbaceous plants of which several species are extensively cultivated for the great beauty of their flowers; vervain.
a.
Arched like the roof of the mouth, as the upper lip of many ringent flowers.
a.
Meeting at the edges without overlapping; -- said of the sepals or the petals of flowers in aestivation, and of leaves in vernation.
v. t.
To strip of flowers.
v.
Plants without true flowers, and reproduced by minute spores of various kinds, or by simple cell division.
a.
Having one sex only, as plants which have the male and female flowers on separate individuals, or animals in which the sexes are in separate individuals; di/cious; -- distinguished from bisexual, or hermaphrodite. See Di/cious.
a.
Pertaining to one side; one-sided; as, a unilateral raceme, in which the flowers grow only on one side of a common axis, or are all turned to one side.
a.
Charged with leaves, fruits, flowers, etc.; -- said of a border.
n.
A genus of shrubs having opposite, petiolate leaves and cymose flowers, several species of which are cultivated as ornamental, as the laurestine and the guelder-rose.
a.
Having marks or patches of different colors; as, variegated leaves, or flowers.
a.
A whorl of flowers apparently of one cluster, but composed of two opposite axillary cymes, as in mint. See Illust. of Whorl.
n.
The slender base of a petal in some flowers; a claw; called also ungula.
v.
Plants having distinct flowers and true seeds.
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