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dandelion
[ dan-dl-ahy-uhn ]
noun
- a weedy composite plant, Taraxacum officinale, having edible, deeply toothed or notched leaves, golden-yellow flowers, and rounded clusters of white, hairy seeds.
- any other plant of the genus Taraxacum.
dandelion
/ ˈæԻɪˌɪə /
noun
- a plant, Taraxacum officinale, native to Europe and Asia and naturalized as a weed in North America, having yellow rayed flowers and deeply notched basal leaves, which are used for salad or wine: family Asteraceae (composites)
- any of several similar related plants
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yvlog History and Origins
Origin of dandelion1
1505–15; < Middle French, alteration of dent de lion, literally, tooth of (a) lion, translation of Medieval Latin dēns leōnis, in allusion to the toothed leaves
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yvlog History and Origins
Origin of dandelion1
C15: from Old French dent de lion, literally: tooth of a lion, referring to its leaves
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Example Sentences
In her home state of Kentucky, they pop up like dandelions.
From
They originally thought they had found the tallest dandelion.
From
In 2021, Ms Nicholson decided to "take back control" by getting a tattoo of a dandelion clock in the place her alopecia first began- to represent her hair "flying away".
From
Kate reads not radar but dandelion fluff and the way wind ripples across wheat.
From
The fibres, at least 50 times smaller than a human hair, are so lightweight that the researchers printed them directly onto the fluffy seedhead of a dandelion without collapsing its structure.
From
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