COMUL Meaning What does COMUL mean as an abbreviation? But Most VPs Have To. bhang and hashish as well as fiber, a stiff yucca with a short trunk; found in the southern United States and tropical America; has rigid spine-tipped leaves and clusters of white flowers, tall yucca of the southwestern United States and Mexico having a woody stem and stiff swordlike pointed leaves and a large cluster of white flowers, a large branched arborescent yucca of southwestern United States having short leaves and clustered greenish white flowers, arborescent yucca of southwestern United States and northern Mexico with sword-shaped leaves and white flowers, tall arborescent yucca of southwestern United States, yucca with long stiff leaves having filamentlike appendages, yucca of west central United States having a clump of basal grasslike leaves and a central stalk with a terminal raceme of small whitish flowers, yucca of southeastern United States similar to the Spanish bayonets but with shorter trunk and smoother leaves, yucca of southern United States having a clump of basal grasslike leaves and a central stalk with a terminal raceme of small whitish flowers, yucca of southwestern United States and Mexico with a tall spike of creamy white flowers, a tropical flowering shrub having bright orange or red flowers; sometimes placed in genus Poinciana, tropical shrub or small tree having showy yellow to orange-red flowers; sometimes placed in genus Poinciana, tropical American plant having leaflets somewhat sensitive to the touch; sometimes placed in genus Cassia, tropical shrub (especially of Americas) having yellow flowers and large leaves whose juice is used as a cure for ringworm and poisonous bites; sometimes placed in genus Cassia, evergreen Indian shrub with vivid yellow flowers whose bark is used in tanning; sometimes placed in genus Cassia, erect shrub having racemes of tawny yellow flowers; the dried leaves are used medicinally as a cathartic; sometimes placed in genus Cassia, cosmopolitan tropical herb or subshrub with yellow flowers and slender curved pods; a weed; sometimes placed in genus Cassia, very leafy malodorous tropical weedy shrub whose seeds have been used as an adulterant for coffee; sometimes classified in genus Cassia, shrub of sandy woodlands and stream banks of western United States having hoary pinnate flowers and dull-colored racemose flowers; thought to indicate the presence of lead ore, an erect to spreading hairy shrub of the Pacific coast of the United States having racemes of red to indigo flowers, dense shrub of moist riverbanks and flood plains of the eastern United States having attractive fragrant foliage and dense racemes of dark purple flowers, large spiny shrub of eastern Asia having clusters of yellow flowers; often cultivated in shelterbelts and hedges, shrub with dark-green glossy foliage and solitary pale yellow flowers; northern China, small shrubby tree of New Zealand having weeping branches and racemes of white to violet flowers followed by woolly indehiscent two-seeded pods, sprawling shrubby perennial noted for its scarlet black-marked flowers; widely distributed in dry parts of Australia, evergreen shrub with scarlet to white clawlike or beaklike flowers; New Zealand, European herb resembling vetch; naturalized in the eastern United States; having umbels of pink-and-white flowers and sharp-angled pods, low European broom having trifoliate leaves and yellowish-white flowers, deciduous erect spreading broom native to western Europe; widely cultivated for its rich yellow flowers, any of various tropical and subtropical plants having trifoliate leaves and rough sticky pod sections or loments, prickly yellow-flowered shrub of the moors of New England and Europe, erect shrub of southwestern Europe having racemes of golden yellow flowers, small Eurasian shrub having clusters of yellow flowers that yield a dye; common as a weed in Britain and the United States; sometimes grown as an ornamental, perennial of western United States having racemes of pink to purple flowers followed by flat pods that separate into nearly orbicular joints, perennial of southern Europe cultivated for forage and for its nectar-rich pink flowers that make it an important honey crop, European woody perennial with yellow umbellate flowers followed by flattened pods that separate into horseshoe-shaped joints, shrub of West Indies and South America that is a source of indigo dye, an ornamental shrub or tree of the genus Laburnum, an ornamental shrub or tree of the genus Laburnum; often cultivated for Easter decorations, any of several tropical American woody plants of the genus Lonchocarpus whose roots are used locally as a fish poison and commercially as a source of rotenone, North American annual with red or rose-colored flowers, low-growing much-branched perennial of Canary Islands having orange-red to scarlet or purple flowers; naturalized in United States, European forage plant having claw-shaped pods introduced in America, stout perennial of eastern and central North America having palmate leaves and showy racemose blue flowers, the annual woody vine of Asia having long clusters of purplish flowers and densely hairy pods; cultivated in southern United States for green manure and grazing, European woody plant having pink flowers and unifoliate leaves and long tough roots; spreads by underground runners, Eurasian plant having loose racemes of pink or purple flowers and spiny stems and tough roots, tall thornless shrub having pale yellow flowers and flexible rushlike twigs used in basketry; of southwestern Europe and Mediterranean; naturalized in California, a plant of the genus Tephrosia having pinnate leaves and white or purplish flowers and flat hairy pods, annual with broadly ovate leaves and slender drooping spikes of crimson flowers; southeastern Asia and Australia; naturalized in North America, any plant of the genus Eriogonum with small clustered flowers, European alpine rose with crimson flowers, low-growing bristly shrub of southern Oregon and California with creeping rootstocks and usually corymbose flowers, Chinese evergreen climbing rose with yellow or white single flowers, prickly wild rose with delicate pink or white scentless flowers; native to Europe, shrubby Chinese rose; ancestor of many cultivated garden roses, large hardy very fragrant pink rose; cultivated in Asia Minor as source of attar of roses; parent of many hybrids, Eurasian rose with prickly stems and fragrant leaves and bright pink flowers followed by scarlet hips, Chinese climbing rose with fragrant white blossoms, vigorously growing rose having clusters of numerous small flowers; used for hedges and as grafting stock, rose native to Mediterranean region having curved or climbing branches and loose clusters of musky-scented flowers, any of several hybrid bush roses derived from a tea-scented Chinese rose with pink or yellow flowers, shrub or small tree of northwestern North America having fragrant creamy white flowers and small waxy purple-red fruits, open-growing shrub of eastern North America having pure white flowers and small waxy almost black fruits, deciduous thorny shrub native to Japan having red blossoms, deciduous thorny shrub native to China having red or white blossoms, climbing evergreen shrub with white flowers and red berries; often used as ground cover, deciduous flat-growing shrub with a fanned herringbone pattern and having reddish flowers and orange-red berries; used as a ground cover, southern United States hawthorn with pinnately lobed leaves, common shrub or small tree of the eastern United States having few thorns and white flowers in corymbs followed by bright orange-red berries, erect and almost thornless American hawthorn with somewhat pear-shaped berries, eastern United States hawthorn with long straight thorns, hawthorn of southern United States bearing a juicy, acidic, scarlet fruit that is often used in jellies or preserves, thorny Eurasian shrub of small tree having dense clusters of white to scarlet flowers followed by deep red berries; established as an escape in eastern North America, European hawthorn having deeply cleft leaves and bright red fruits; widely cultivated in many varieties and often grown as impenetrable hedges; established as an escape in eastern North America, American red-fruited hawthorn with stems and leaves densely covered with short woolly hairs, evergreen hawthorn of southeastern Europe, American red-fruited hawthorn with dense corymbs of pink-red flowers, creeping evergreen shrub with large white flowers; widely distributed in northern portions of Eurasia and North America, any of various perennials of the genus Geum having usually pinnate basal leaves and variously colored flowers, low-growing perennial having leaves silvery beneath; northern United States; Europe; Asia, dwarf ornamental shrub of western United States having large black to red and yellow sweet edible fruit, shrub having copious small white flowers in spring, evergreen shrub widely cultivated for its large fragrant waxlike white flowers and glossy leaves, handsome shrub with showy orange to scarlet or crimson flowers; Florida and West Indies to Mexico and Brazil, creeping evergreen subshrub of the northern parts of Europe and Asia with delicate fragrant tubular bell-shaped usually pink flowers borne in pairs, bushy honeysuckle with twining branches and white or yellow-white flowers; southern United States, erect deciduous North American shrub with yellow-white flowers, deciduous climbing shrub with fragrant yellow-white flowers in axillary whorls, twining deciduous shrub with clusters of purple-tinged yellow-green flowers; northeastern America, climbing deciduous shrub with fragrant yellow (later orange) flowers in terminal whorls; southeastern United States, twining deciduous shrub with hairy leaves and spikes of yellow-orange flowers; northeastern America, shrubby honeysuckle with purple flowers; western North America, an Asiatic trailing evergreen honeysuckle with half-evergreen leaves and fragrant white flowers turning yellow with age; has become a weed in some areas, a variety of Japanese honeysuckle that grows like a vine; established as an aggressive escape in southeastern United States, a grey deciduous honeysuckle shrub paired white flowers turning yellow; Japan, European twining honeysuckle with fragrant red and yellow-white flowers, evergreen North American honeysuckle vine having coral-red or orange flowers, a honeysuckle shrub of southern Russia to central Asia, cultivated Eurasian shrub with twin yellowish-white flowers and scarlet fruit, common elder of central and eastern North America bearing purple-black berries; fruit used in wines and jellies, shrub or small tree of western United States having white flowers and blue berries; fruit used in wines and jellies, dwarf herbaceous elder of Europe having pink flowers and a nauseous odor, a common shrub with black fruit or a small tree of Europe and Asia; fruit used for wines and jellies, common North American shrub or small tree, any of various plants of the genus Polygala, tropical annual procumbent poisonous subshrub having fruit that splits into five spiny nutlets; serious pasture weed, large slow-growing evergreen shrub or small tree with multiple stems; extensively used for hedges or borders and topiary figures, any plant of the genus Pachysandra; low-growing evergreen herbs or subshrubs having dentate leaves and used as ground cover, small erect deciduous shrub having tough white wood and cathartic bark and fruit, bushy deciduous shrub with branches having thin wide corky longitudinal wings; brilliant red in autumn; northeastern Asia to central China, shrubby tree of southern United States having large plumes of feathery flowers resembling puffs of smoke, Old World shrub having large plumes of yellowish feathery flowers resembling puffs of smoke, sweet-scented sumac of eastern America having ternate leaves and yellowish-green flowers in spikes resembling catkins followed by red hairy fruits, common nonpoisonous shrub of eastern North America with waxy compound leaves and green paniculate flowers followed by red berries, common nonpoisonous shrub of eastern North America with compound leaves and green paniculate flowers followed by red berries, evergreen shrub of southeastern United States with spikes of reddish yellow flowers and glandular hairy fruits, deciduous shrubby tree or eastern North America with compound leaves that turn brilliant red in fall and dense panicles of greenish yellow flowers followed by crimson acidic berries, deciduous shrub of California with unpleasantly scented usually trifoliate leaves and edible fruit, shrubby thorny deciduous tree of southeastern United States with white flowers and small black drupaceous fruit, deciduous tree of southeastern United States and Mexico, deciduous shrub of eastern Asia bearing decorative bright blue fruit, styrax of southwestern United States; a threatened species, perennial subshrub of Tenerife having leaves in rosettes resembling pinwheels, deciduous climber with aerial roots having white to creamy flowers in fairly flat heads, deciduous shrub with creamy white flower clusters; eastern United States, deciduous shrub bearing roundheaded flower clusters opening green and aging to pink or blue, deciduous shrub or small tree with pyramidal flower clusters, deciduous climber with aerial roots having large flat flower heads, California evergreen shrub having glossy opposite leaves and terminal clusters of a few fragrant white flowers, woody climber of southeastern United States having white flowers in compound terminal clusters, any of various shrubs of the genus Deutzia having usually toothed opposite leaves and shredding bark and white or pink flowers in loose terminal clusters, large hardy shrub with showy and strongly fragrant creamy-white flowers in short terminal racemes, cultivated European current bearing small edible red berries, widely cultivated current bearing edible black aromatic berries, garden currant bearing small white berries, aromatic Mediterranean shrub widely cultivated for its lilac flowers which are dried and used in sachets, shrubby greyish lavender of southwestern Europe having usually reddish-purple flowers, Mediterranean plant with pale purple flowers that yields spike lavender oil, any of various plants of the genus Phlomis; grown primarily for their dense whorls of lipped flowers and attractive foliage, a spreading subshrub of Mediterranean regions cultivated for dense axillary whorls of purple or yellow flowers, any of various plants of the genus Teucrium, any of several plants of the genus Trichostema having whorls of small blue flowers, plant bearing erect pungent conical red or yellow or purple fruits; sometimes grown as an ornamental, plant bearing very hot and finely tapering long peppers; usually red, plant bearing large mild thick-walled usually bell-shaped fruits; the principal salad peppers, plant bearing small rounded usually pungent fruits, plant bearing very small and very hot oblong red fruits; includes wild forms native to tropical America; thought to be ancestral to the sweet pepper and many hot peppers, plant bearing very hot medium-sized oblong red peppers; grown principally in the Gulf Coast states for production of hot sauce, intensely poisonous tall coarse annual tropical weed having rank-smelling foliage, large white or violet trumpet-shaped flowers and prickly fruits, deciduous erect or spreading shrub with spiny branches and violet-purple flowers followed by orange-red berries; southeastern Europe to China, poisonous Old World spurge; adventive in America; seeds yield a purgative oil, not unattractive European weed whose flowers turn toward the sun, an Old World spurge introduced as a weed in the eastern United States, African dwarf succulent perennial shrub with numerous slender drooping branches, common perennial United States spurge having showy white petallike bracts, annual spurge of western United States having showy white-bracted flower clusters and very poisonous milk, Old World perennial having foliage resembling cypress; naturalized as a weed in the United States, tall European perennial naturalized and troublesome as a weed in eastern North America, much-branched hirsute weed native to northeastern North America, tropical American plant having poisonous milk and showy tapering usually scarlet petallike leaves surrounding small yellow flowers, showy poinsettia found from the southern United States to Peru, poinsettia of United States and eastern Mexico; often confused with Euphorbia heterophylla, European perennial herb with greenish yellow terminal flower clusters, wax-coated shrub of northern Mexico and southwestern United States, European erect or depressed annual weedy spurge adventive in northeastern United States, Mexican shrub often cultivated for its scarlet-bracted flowers, small tree of dry open parts of southern Africa having erect angled branches suggesting candelabra, somewhat climbing bushy spurge of Madagascar having long woody spiny stems with few leaves and flowers with scarlet bracts, an annual weed of northeastern North America with dentate leaves, cassava with long tuberous edible roots and soft brittle stems; used especially to make cassiri (an intoxicating drink) and tapioca, South American plant with roots used as a vegetable and herbage used for stock feed, wax-coated Mexican shrub related to Euphorbia antisyphilitica, low tropical American shrub having powerful emetic properties, greenhouse shrub with glossy green leaves and showy fragrant rose-like flowers; cultivated in many varieties, shrubby tree of the Pacific coast of the United States; yields cascara sagrada, deciduous shrub of eastern and central United States having black berrylike fruit; golden-yellow in autumn, evergreen shrub of western United States bearing small red or black fruits, small spiny evergreen shrub of western United States and Mexico with minute flowers and bright red berries, twining woody vine of Madagascar having thick dark waxy evergreen leaves and clusters of large fragrant waxy white flowers along the stems; widely cultivated in warm regions, a plant having hard lignified tissues or woody parts especially stems, all the plant life in a particular region or period, the remote outback of Australia; unpopulated desert country, the bush country of the interior of Australia, a wild and uninhabited area left in its natural condition, a covering for the body (or parts of it) consisting of a dense growth of threadlike structures (as on the human head); helps to prevent heat loss, DISCLAIMER: These example sentences appear in various news sources and books to reflect the usage of the word. Al Gore in one of the closest and most-controversial elections in . See more. Bush and Renz have been working together for about a dozen years, producing social justicedriven advertising, short films, and music videos, which means they were very used to collaborating by the time they made the movie. n. Small trees or shrubs growing beneath the taller trees in a forest, especially when thick or tangled. African people have long hunted bats . The Supreme Court eventually intervened to let stand a preliminary count that awarded Bush the state. n. - pubic hair, usually in reference to females. Simcenter - CAE Simulation. (often the bush) [uncountable] an area of wild land that has not been cleared, especially in Africa and Australia; in New Zealand an area where the forest has not been cleared Children are taught from an early age how to survive in the bush. a replaceable hardened steel tube used as a guide for various tools or parts, as a drill or valve rod. Copyright 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. verb wait in hiding to attack. noun any of several spiny cacti of the genus Opuntia that grow in the southwestern US and Mexico and have cylindrical stem segmentsSee also prickly pear Word Origin for cholla Mexican Spanish, from Spanish: head, perhaps from Old French (dialect) cholle ball, of Germanic origin His boss, who he admires, is waiting to meet with him about the big project. There are grammar debates that never die; and the ones highlighted in the questions in this quiz are sure to rile everyone up once again. Do you know how to answer the questions that cause some of the greatest grammar debates? Not having completed the loading of his gun, Tom hastily rode behind a dense bush, and concealed himself as well as he could. a shrub with flowers. fortnight - A period of 14 days. Adult: pass me the orange peels on the table Child: ok Adult: Thank you bubush by the people lord February 1, 2016 Get the bubush mug. You might plant a rose bush under your bedroom window. a rose/mulberry bush. To those who agreed with him, Bush pledged that the law against same-sex marriage would remain intact. It can also refer to plants which resemble Urtica species in appearance but do not have stinging hairs. Cnidoscolus stimulosus, bull nettle, spurge nettle. Plain bearings are used primarily in machinery that has a rotating or . noun Electricity. Maximize your production output thanks to: Faster packaging. OWOT - Our World Of Text. Columbus definition, Italian navigator in Spanish service: traditionally considered the discoverer of America 1492. omul, (Arapa: ) Trklerden bir boy.. Kagarl Mahmud, Divn- Lgati't-Trk'te; "Bu boylarn hepsi Rum lkesi yanndan douya doru ylece uzanr, gider: "iil, Toxs, Yama, Orak, aruk, omul, Uygur, Tenut, Xtay".Kitay lkesi "in"dir. something resembling or suggesting this, as a thick, shaggy head of hair. The American Heritage Idioms Dictionary 1. either of two cud-chewing artiodactyl mammals of the genus Camelus (see Arabian camel, Bactrian camel ): family Camelidae. Understanding CBUSH/PBUSH Input in Femap. a shrub that is cultivated by Arabs for its leaves which are chewed or used to make tea, jointed and nearly leafless desert shrub having reduced scalelike leaves and reddish fleshy seeds, low wide-spreading coniferous shrub of New Zealand mountains, about the hardiest Podocarpaceae species; prostrate spreading shrub similar to mountain rimu; mountains of southern Chile, low-growing to prostrate shrub with slender trailing branches; New Zealand, small shrub or Tasmania having short stiff branches, any of numerous plants of the genus Berberis having prickly stems and yellow flowers followed by small red berries, tall herb of eastern North America and Asia having blue berrylike fruit and a thick knotty rootstock formerly used medicinally, ornamental evergreen shrub of Pacific coast of North America having dark green pinnate leaves and racemes of yellow flowers followed by blue-black berries, small shrub with grey-green leaves and yellow flowers followed by glaucous blue berries, deciduous shrubs having aromatic bark; eastern China; southwestern and eastern United States, deciduous Japanese shrub cultivated for its fragrant yellow flowers, deciduous shrub of the eastern United States having highly aromatic leaves and bark and yellow flowers followed by scarlet or yellow berries, evergreen shrub or small tree whose foliage is conspicuously blotched with red and yellow and having small black fruits, bog shrub of north temperate zone having bitter-tasting fragrant leaves, any shrub or small tree of the genus Myrica with aromatic foliage and small wax-coated berries, deciduous shrub of eastern North America with sweet scented fernlike leaves and tiny white flowers, very small deciduous dioecious tree or shrub of damp habitats in southeastern United States having extremely light wood, any of various tropical shrubs or trees of the genus Mimosa having usually yellow flowers and compound leaves, Brazilian shrub having twice-pinnate leaves and small spicate flowers followed by flat or irregularly torulose pods; sometimes placed in genus Piptadenia, any of various shrubs and small trees valued for their fine foliage and attractive spreading habit and clustered white to deep pink or red flowers, West Indian tree yielding a hard dark brown wood resembling mahogany in texture and value, erect shrub with small if any spines having racemes of white to yellow flowers followed by curved pointed pods and black shiny seeds; West Indies and Florida, any of several small spiny trees or shrubs of the genus Prosopis having small flowers in axillary cylindrical spikes followed by large pods rich in sugar, medium-sized shrubby tree of South Africa having thick leathery evergreen leaves and white or pink flowers and globose usually two-seeded purplish black fruits, South African shrub having a swollen succulent stem and bearing showy pink and white flowers after the leaves fall; popular as an ornamental in tropics, a shrub of the genus Carissa having fragrant white flowers and plumlike red to purple-black fruits, any of various tropical American deciduous shrubs or trees of the genus Plumeria having milky sap and showy fragrant funnel-shaped variously colored flowers, any shrub or small tree of the genus Rauwolfia having leaves in whorls and cymose flowers; yield substances used medicinally especially as emetics or purgatives or antihypertensives, any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Strophanthus having whorled leaves and showy flowers of various colors in dense and corymbose clusters; some have poisonous seeds, tropical shrub having glossy foliage and fragrant nocturnal flowers with crimped or wavy corollas; northern India to Thailand, tropical American shrub or small tree having glossy dark green leaves and fragrant saffron yellow to orange or peach- colored flowers; all parts highly poisonous, small deciduous clump-forming tree or shrub of eastern United States, deciduous clump-forming Asian shrub or small tree; adventive in the eastern United States, similar to American angelica tree but less prickly; China, erect evergreen shrub or small tree of Australia and northern New Guinea having palmately compound leaves, low-growing strong-smelling coastal shrub of warm parts of the New World having unisexual flowers in conelike spikes and thick succulent leaves, any of various shrubby plants of the genus Atriplex that thrive in dry alkaline soil, densely branched Eurasian plant; foliage turns purple-red in autumn, bushy annual weed of central North America having greenish flowers and winged seeds, bushy plant of Old World salt marshes and sea beaches having prickly leaves; burned to produce a crude soda ash, prickly bushy Eurasian plant; a troublesome weed in central and western United States, low hardy much-branched spiny shrub common in alkaline soils of western America, any of numerous plants of the genus Capparis, plant of southeastern Europe having yellow flowers like those of mustard and pods with open valves resembling bucklers, evergreen shrub of southwestern United States and Mexico often cultivated for its fragrant golden yellow flowers, low-growing plant found only in volcanic craters on Hawaii having rosettes of narrow pointed silver-green leaves and clusters of profuse red-purple flowers on a tall stem, any of various composite shrubs or herbs of the genus Artemisia having aromatic green or greyish foliage, a shrub of salt marshes of eastern and south central North America and West Indies; fruit is surrounded with white plumelike hairy tufts, California shrub with slender leafy shoots that are important browse for mule deer, widely spreading evergreen shrub of southwestern United States with flower heads in a leafy panicle, any of various much-branched yellow-flowered shrubs of the genus Chrysothamnus; western North America, western American shrubs having white felted foliage and yellow flowers that become red-purple, any of various plants of the genus Mutisia, any of various mostly Australian attractively shaped shrubs of the genus Olearia grown for their handsome and sometimes fragrant evergreen foliage and profusion of daisy flowers with white or purple or blue rays, a South African plant of the genus Othonna having smooth often fleshy leaves and heads of yellow flowers, branching aromatic Mediterranean shrub with woolly stems and leaves and yellow flowers, stiff much-branched perennial of the Mediterranean region having very white woolly stems and leaves, any of several Old World coarse prickly-leaved shrubs and subshrubs having milky juice and yellow flowers; widely naturalized; often noxious weeds in cultivated soil, shrub with coral-red berries; Japan to northern India, tropical American shrub or small tree with brown wood and dark berries, a plant of the genus Plumbago with blue flowers, small West Indian shrub or tree with hard glossy seeds patterned yellow and brown that are used to make bracelets, West Indian shrub or small tree having leathery saponaceous leaves and extremely hard wood, any of various plants of the family Malvaceae, erect bushy mallow plant or small tree bearing bolls containing seeds with many long hairy fibers, arborescent perennial shrub having palmately lobed furry leaves and showy red-purple flowers; southwestern United States, any of various evergreen plants of the genus Pavonia having white or yellow or purple flowers, southern and western Australian shrub with unlobed or shallowly lobed toothed leaves and purple flowers; sometimes placed in genus Hibiscus, graceful deciduous shrub or small tree having attractive foliage and small red berries that turn black at maturity and are used for making wine, any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Dombeya grown for their rounded clusters of exquisite often sweet-scented flowers usually hanging beneath the leaves, any of several handsome evergreen shrubs of California and northern Mexico having downy lobed leaves and showy yellow flowers, African shrub having decumbent stems and slender yellow honey-scented flowers either solitary or in pairs, drought-resistant Asiatic treelike shrub bearing pleasantly acid small red edible fruits commonly used in sherbets, large shrub of South Africa having many conspicuously hairy branches with large hairy leaves and clusters of conspicuous white flowers, any tropical African shrub of the genus Protea having alternate rigid leaves and dense colorful flower heads resembling cones, any shrub or tree of the genus Banksia having alternate leathery leaves apetalous yellow flowers often in showy heads and conelike fruit with winged seeds, any of various shrubs of the genus Conospermum with panicles of mostly white woolly flowers, grown for outstanding display of brilliant usually scarlet-crimson flowers; Andes, Chilean shrub bearing coral-red fruit with an edible seed resembling a hazelnut, tall straggling shrub with large globose crimson-yellow flowers; western Australia, large bushy shrub with pungent pointed leaves and creamy white flowers; central and eastern Australia, shrub with pungent rigid needle-shaped leaves and white flowers; eastern Australia, erect bushy shrub of eastern Australia having terminal clusters of red flowers yielding much nectar, any of various ornamental evergreens of the genus Lomatia having attractive fragrant flowers, any of numerous shrubs and small trees having hard narrow leaves and long-lasting yellow or white flowers followed by small edible but insipid fruits, tall shrub of eastern Australia having oblanceolate to obovate leaves and red flowers in compact racemes, straggling shrub with narrow leaves and conspicuous red flowers in dense globular racemes, tree bearing pear-shaped fruit with a thick woody epicarp, a low evergreen shrub of the family Ericaceae; has small bell-shaped pink or purple flowers, any of several shrubs of the genus Andromeda having leathery leaves and clusters of small flowers, any of several evergreen shrubs of the genus Arbutus of temperate Europe and America, chiefly evergreen subshrubs of northern to Arctic areas, chiefly evergreen shrubs of warm dry areas of western North America, procumbent Old World mat-forming evergreen shrub with racemes of pinkish-white flowers, north temperate bog shrub with evergreen leathery leaves and small white cylindrical flowers, low-growing evergreen shrub of eastern North America with leathery leaves and clusters of fragrant pink or white flowers, small evergreen shrub of Pacific coast of North America having edible dark purple grape-sized berries, any of several shrubs of the genus Gaylussacia bearing small berries resembling blueberries, evergreen shrub of eastern North America having white or creamy bell-shaped flowers and dark green hairy leaves used for tea during American Revolution, a Rocky Mountain shrub similar to Ledum groenlandicum, bog shrub of northern and central Europe and eastern Siberia to Korea and Japan, low-growing evergreen shrub of New Jersey to Florida grown for its many white star-shaped flowers and glossy foliage, any plant of the genus Leucothoe; grown for their beautiful white flowers; glossy foliage contains a poisonous substance similar to that found in genus Kalmia, fast-growing evergreen shrub of southeastern United States having arching interlaced branches and racemes of white flowers, bushy deciduous shrub of the eastern United States with long racemes of pinkish flowers, creeping mat-forming evergreen shrub of high mountain regions of northern hemisphere grown for its rose-pink flowers, deciduous shrub of coastal plain of the eastern United States having nodding pinkish-white flowers; poisonous to stock, deciduous much-branched shrub with dense downy panicles of small bell-shaped white flowers, showy evergreen shrub of southeastern United States with shiny leaves and angled branches and clusters of pink to reddish flowers that resemble an umbel, straggling shrub of northwestern North America having foliage with a bluish tinge and umbels of small bell-shaped flowers, low shrub of the eastern United States with downy twigs, broad-leaved evergreen Asiatic shrub with glossy leaves and drooping clusters of white flowers, ornamental evergreen shrub of southeastern United States having small white bell-shaped flowers, any shrub of the genus Rhododendron: evergreen shrubs or small shrubby trees having leathery leaves and showy clusters of campanulate (bell-shaped) flowers, any of numerous shrubs of genus Vaccinium bearing cranberries, any of numerous shrubs of the genus Vaccinium bearing blueberries, shrub of eastern and southern coastal United States having beautiful racemes of spice-scented white flowers, creeping evergreen shrub having narrow overlapping leaves and early white star-shaped flowers; of the pine barrens of New Jersey and the Carolinas, any heathlike plant of the family Epacridaceae; most are of the Australian region, small prostrate or ascending shrub having scarlet flowers and succulent fruit resembling cranberries; sometimes placed in genus Styphelia, heathlike shrub of southwestern Australia grown for its sharply scented foliage and pink flowers followed by pentagonal fruit, evergreen shrub similar to golden chinkapin; mountains of California, a low spreading or prostrate shrub of southwestern United States with small acorns and leaves resembling those of the huckleberry, any of various early blooming oleaceous shrubs of the genus Forsythia; native to eastern Asia and southern Europe but widely cultivated for their branches of bright yellow bell-shaped flowers, any of several shrubs and vines of the genus Jasminum chiefly native to Asia, any of various Old World shrubs having smooth entire leaves and terminal panicles of small white flowers followed by small black berries; many used for hedges, evergreen shrub with white flowers and olivelike fruits, any of various plants of the genus Syringa having large panicles of usually fragrant flowers, any of several shrubs or trees of the genus Hamamelis; bark yields an astringent lotion, any of several Asiatic deciduous shrubs cultivated for their nodding racemes of yellow flowers that appear before the leaves, any of several deciduous low-growing shrubs of the genus Fothergilla having showy brushlike spikes of white flowers in spring and fiery red and orange autumn color; grows from Alabama to the Allegheny Mountains, ornamental African shrub or climber with red flowers, any of several shrubs of the genus Elaeagnus having silver-white twigs and yellow flowers followed by olivelike fruits, ornamental shrub from eastern India commonly planted in the southern United States, South American shrub having edible greenish plumlike fruit, any of various tropical shrubs widely cultivated for their showy drooping purplish or reddish or white flowers; Central and South America and New Zealand and Tahiti, any of several ornamental shrubs with shiny mostly evergreen leaves and clusters of small bell-shaped flowers, deciduous shrub of eastern North America having tough flexible branches and pliable bark and small yellow flowers, evergreen spreading shrub of India and southeastern Asia having large purple flowers, a beautiful tropical evergreen epiphytic shrub grown for its lush foliage and huge panicles of pink flowers; Philippines, any of several Australasian evergreen vines widely cultivated in warm regions for their large bright yellow single flowers, large evergreen shrub or small tree having white aromatic bark and leathery leaves and small purple to red flowers in terminal cymes, small shrubs of scrub and dry woodland regions of southern Europe and North Africa; grown for their showy flowers and soft often downy and aromatic evergreen foliage, any plant of the genus Helianthemum; vigorous plants of stony alpine meadows and dry scrub regions, small shrubby tree of Madagascar cultivated in tropical regions as a hedge plant and for its deep red acid fruits resembling small plums, vigorous South African spiny shrub grown for its round yellow juicy edible fruits, large much-branched shrub grown primarily for its evergreen foliage, shrub or small tree grown as an ornamental in mild climates for its neat evergreen foliage and fragrant late flowers; native of China, any of several resinous trees or shrubs often burned for light, shrub with narrow-elliptic glossy evergreen leaves and yellow flowers with leathery petaloid sepals, any shrub or small tree of the genus Tamarix having small scalelike or needle-shaped leaves and feathery racemes of small white or pinkish flowers; of mostly coastal areas with saline soil, any plant of the genus Cannabis; a coarse bushy annual with palmate leaves and clusters of small green flowers; yields tough fibers and narcotic drugs, shrub with stiff flattened stems resembling leaves (cladophylls); used for making brooms, shrub with terminal tufts of elongated leaves used locally for thatching and clothing; thick sweet roots are used as food; tropical southeastern Asia, Australia and Hawaii, any of several evergreen plants of the genus Yucca having usually tall stout stems and a terminal cluster of white flowers; warmer regions of North America, tropical shrub having clusters of white or violet or yellow flowers, spreading thorny shrub of tropical Asia bearing large erect racemes of red-marked yellow flowers, shrub or small tree of Dutch Guiana having clusters of pink flowers streaked with purple, a thorny shrub of the genus Cercidium that grows in dry parts of the southwestern United States and adjacent Mexico; has smooth light green bark and racemes of yellow flowers and small leaves, large shrub or shrubby tree having sharp spines and pinnate leaves with small deciduous leaflets and sweet-scented racemose yellow-orange flowers; grown as ornamentals or hedging or emergency food for livestock; tropical America but naturalized in southern United States, erect shrub having large trifoliate leaves and dense clusters of yellow flowers followed by poisonous seeds; Yugoslavia; sometimes placed in genus Cytisus, any of various plants of the genus Senna having pinnately compound leaves and showy usually yellow flowers; many are used medicinally, any plant of the genus Amorpha having odd-pinnate leaves and purplish spicate flowers, shrub with trifoliate leaves and yellow flowers followed by backward curving seed pods; leaves foetid when crushed, silvery hairy European shrub with evergreen foliage and pale yellow flowers, South African shrub having flat acuminate leaves and yellow flowers; leaves are aromatic when dried and used to make an herbal tea, tropical woody herb with showy yellow flowers and flat pods; much cultivated in the tropics, any plant of the genus Caragana having even-pinnate leaves and mostly yellow flowers followed by seeds in a linear pod, shrub of western United States having pink or crimson flowers; often forms thickets, shrub of Canary Islands having bristle-tipped oblanceolate leaves; used as cattle fodder, any of several small shrubs or twining vines having entire or lobed leaves and racemes of yellow to orange-red flowers; Australia, any of various shrubs or vines of the genus Clianthus having compound leaves and pea-like red flowers in drooping racemes, erect tropical Asian shrub whose small lateral leaflets rotate on their axes and jerk up and down under the influence of sunshine, yellow-flowered European shrub cultivated for its succession of yellow flowers and very inflated bladdery pods and as a source of wildlife food, any of various plants of the genus Coronilla having purple or pink or yellow flowers in long axillary heads or umbels, any of various shrubs of the genera Cytisus or Genista or Spartium having long slender branches and racemes of yellow flowers, greyish-green shrub of desert regions of southwestern United States and Mexico having sparse foliage and terminal spikes of bluish violet flowers; locally important as source of a light-colored honey of excellent flavor, any of several spiny shrubs of the genus Daviesia having yellow flowers and triangular seeds; Australia, any of various usually woody vines of the genus Derris of tropical Asia whose roots yield the insecticide rotenone; several are sources of native fish and arrow poisons, any of various Australian evergreen shrubs of the genus Gastrolobium having whorled compound leaves poisonous to livestock and showy yellow to deep reddish-orange flowers followed by two-seeded pods, thorny shrub or small tree common in central Argentina having small orange or yellow flowers followed by edible berries, spiny shrub of the Caspian salt plains and Siberia having elegant silvery, downy young foliage and mildly fragrant pink-purple blooms, any of several attractive evergreen shrubs of Australia grown for their glossy deep green foliage and flowers in rich blues and intense violets, deciduous subshrub of southeastern Asia having pinnate leaves and clusters of red or purple flowers; a source of indigo dye, evergreen shrub of the Pacific coast of the United States having showy yellow or blue flowers; naturalized in Australia, any of several erect or climbing woody plants of the genus Mucuna; widespread in tropics of both hemispheres, spiny evergreen xerophytic shrub having showy rose and purple flowers and forming dense thickets; of dry rocky mountain slopes of California, evergreen shrub having almost heart-shaped foliage and bright yellow pea-like flowers followed by flat pods with flat wings; Australia and Tasmania, low spreading evergreen shrub of southern Australia having triangular to somewhat heart-shaped foliage and orange-yellow flowers followed by flat winged pods, desert shrub of Syria and Arabia having small white flowers; constitutes the juniper of the Old Testament; sometimes placed in genus Genista, large shrub or small tree of the eastern United States having bristly stems and large clusters of pink flowers, Australian shrub having simple obovate leaves and brilliant scarlet flowers, very spiny and dense evergreen shrub with fragrant golden-yellow flowers; common throughout western Europe, Australian leafless shrub resembling broom and having small yellow flowers, any of many shrubs of the genus Rosa that bear roses, any of various North American trees or shrubs having showy white flowers and edible blue-black or purplish fruit, Asiatic ornamental shrub with spiny branches and pink or red blossoms, any shrub of the genus Cotoneaster: erect or creeping shrubs having richly colored autumn foliage and many small white to pinkish flowers followed by tiny red or black fruits, a spring-flowering shrub or small tree of the genus Crataegus, ornamental evergreen treelike shrub of the Pacific coast of the United States having large white flowers and red berrylike fruits; often placed in genus Photinia, any of a numerous plants grown for their five-petaled flowers; abundant in temperate regions; alleged to have medicinal properties, frequently cultivated Eurasian evergreen shrub or small tree having showy clusters of white flowers and glossy foliage and yielding oil similar to bitter almond oil, small straggling American cherry growing on sandy soil and having minute scarcely edible purplish-black fruit, a thorny Eurasian bush with plumlike fruits, any of various thorny shrubs of the genus Pyracantha bearing small white flowers followed by hard red or orange-red berries, any rosaceous plant of the genus Spiraea; has sprays of small white or pink flowers, evergreen climbing shrub of southern Florida and West Indies grown for its racemes of fragrant white to creamy flowers followed by globose white succulent berries, any of various shrubs and small trees of the genus Gardenia having large fragrant white or yellow flowers, any of several flowering tropical or subtropical shrubs of the genus Hamelia, ornamental shrub or small tree of swampy areas in southwestern United States having large pink or white sepals and yielding Georgia bark for treating fever, a stout spreading or semi-climbing tropical shrub with round brownish-red warty fruit; Africa, any of various deciduous or evergreen ornamental shrubs of the genus Abelia having opposite simple leaves and cymes of small white or pink or purplish flowers; Asia and Mexico, spreading bush of northeastern United States having small clusters of fragrant green and yellow flowers, bush honeysuckle of southeastern United States having large crowded clusters of sulfur-yellow flowers, Chinese deciduous shrub with yellow-throated pinkish flowers and bristly fruit; often cultivated as an ornamental, shrub honeysuckle with drooping spikes of purplish flowers, North American deciduous shrub cultivated for it abundant clusters of coral-red berrylike fruits, any of numerous shrubs or small trees of temperate and subtropical northern hemisphere having white flowers and berrylike fruit, deciduous North American shrub or small tree having three-lobed leaves and red berries, vigorous deciduous European treelike shrub common along waysides; red berries turn black, deciduous thicket-forming Old World shrub with clusters of white flowers and small bright red berries, deciduous shrub of eastern North America having blue-black berries and tough pliant wood formerly used to make arrows, closely related to southern arrow wood; grows in the eastern United States from Maine to Ohio and Georgia, upright deciduous shrub having frosted dark-blue fruit; east and east central North America, deciduous shrub widely cultivated for its white or pink or red flowers, a South American shrub whose leaves are chewed by natives of the Andes; a source of cocaine, a South American shrub whose leaves are a source of cocaine, perennial shrub of the eastern Mediterranean region and southwestern Asia having flowers whose buds are used as capers, desert shrub of southwestern United States and New Mexico having persistent resinous aromatic foliage and small yellow flowers, any small tree or twining shrub of the genus Celastrus, any shrubby trees or woody vines of the genus Euonymus having showy usually reddish berries, deciduous shrub having purple capsules enclosing scarlet seeds, upright deciduous plant with crimson pods and seeds; the eastern United States from New York to Florida and Texas, shrub or small tree of southeastern United States to West Indies and Brazil; grown for the slender racemes of white flowers and orange and crimson foliage, a low evergreen shrub with small purple flowers and black berrylike fruit, dense rounded evergreen shrub of China having spiny leaves; widely cultivated as an ornamental, any of several shrubs or shrubby trees of the genus Cotinus, small aromatic evergreen shrub of California having paniculate leaves and whitish berries; in some classifications included in genus Rhus, an evergreen shrub of the Mediterranean region that is cultivated for its resin, a shrub or tree of the genus Rhus (usually limited to the non-poisonous members of the genus), any shrub or small tree of the genus Bumelia, any shrub or small tree of the genus Styrax having fragrant bell-shaped flowers that hang below the dark green foliage, any of various deciduous or evergreen shrubs of the genus Hydrangea, any of various chiefly deciduous ornamental shrubs of the genus Philadelphus having white sweet-scented flowers, single or in clusters; widely grown in temperate regions, climbing shrub with adhesive aerial roots having opposite leaves and small white flowers in terminal cymes; Himalayas to Taiwan and Japan, Chilean evergreen shrub having delicate spikes of small white flowers, any of various deciduous shrubs of the genus Ribes bearing currants, spiny Eurasian shrub having greenish purple-tinged flowers and ovoid yellow-green or red-purple berries, tropical Old World shrub having purple or red tubular flowers and leaf markings resembling the profile of a human face, evergreen shrubby tree resembling a willow of dry regions of southwestern North America having showy purplish flowers and long seed pods, tropical plant having thick hairy somewhat toothed leaves and solitary or clustered yellow to scarlet flowers; many cultivated for their flowers and ornamental foliage, viscid evergreen shrub of western United States with white to deep lilac flowers; the sticky aromatic leaves are used in treating bronchial and pulmonary illnesses, small shrub of Apalachicola River area in southeastern United States having highly aromatic pinkish flowers; a threatened species, any of various Old World aromatic shrubs or subshrubs with usually mauve or blue flowers; widely cultivated, California plant with woolly stems and leaves and large white flowers, small East Indian shrubby mint; fragrant oil from its leaves is used in perfumes, low branching dark green shrub with bunches of brick-red flowers at ends of branches; coastal ranges and foothills of northern California, small perennial shrub cultivated in uplands of South America for its edible bright orange fruits resembling tomatoes or oranges, South American shrub or small tree widely cultivated in the tropics; not a true potato, West Indian shrub with fragrant showy yellowish-white flowers, a South American plant that is cultivated for its large fragrant trumpet-shaped flowers, South American plant cultivated for its very large nocturnally fragrant trumpet-shaped flowers, arborescent South American shrub having very large orange-red flowers, any of various tropical plants of the genus Capsicum bearing peppers, West Indian evergreen shrub having clusters of funnel-shaped white flowers that are fragrant by day, West Indian evergreen shrub having clusters of funnel-shaped yellow-white flowers that are fragrant by night, South American arborescent shrub having pale pink blossoms followed by egg-shaped reddish-brown edible fruit somewhat resembling a tomato in flavor, any of several plants of the genus Datura, Peruvian shrub with small pink to lavender tubular flowers; leaves yield a tonic and diuretic, any of various shrubs or vines of the genus Lycium with showy flowers and bright berries, spiny evergreen shrub of southeastern United States having spreading branches usually blue or mauve flowers and red berries, Mexican evergreen climbing plant having large solitary funnel-shaped fragrant yellow flowers with purple-brown ridges in the throat, evergreen South American shrub having showy trumpet-shaped orange flowers; grown as an ornamental or houseplant, any of numerous plants of the genus Euphorbia; usually having milky often poisonous juice, tropical Asiatic shrub; source of croton oil, grown in many varieties for their brightly colored foliage; widely cultivated as a houseplant, large shrub of tropical Africa and Asia having large palmate leaves and spiny capsules containing seeds that are the source of castor oil and ricin; widely naturalized throughout the tropics, any of several plants of the genus Manihot having fleshy roots yielding a nutritious starch, any of several tropical American shrubby succulent plants resembling cacti but having foot-shaped bracts, any of several shrubs or small evergreen trees having solitary white or pink or reddish flowers, a tropical evergreen shrub or small tree extensively cultivated in e.g.
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