| thym | leaves can be used as seasoning for almost any meat and stews and stuffings and vegetables |
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| thym | any of various mints of the genus Thymus |
| thym | a colorless crystalline solid used in perfume or preserving biological specimens or in embalming or medically as a fungicide or antiseptic |
| thym | Eurasian annual sprawling plant naturalized throughout North America |
| thym | perennial decumbent herb having small opposite leaves and racemes of blue flowers |
| thym | family of tough-barked trees and shrubs and herbs especially of Australia and tropical Africa |
| thym | Myrtaceae |
| thym | a colorless crystalline solid used in perfume or preserving biological specimens or in embalming or medically as a fungicide or antiseptic |
| thym | a nucleoside component of DNA |
| thym | a base found in DNA (but not in RNA) and derived from pyrimidine |
| thym | a colorless crystalline solid used in perfume or preserving biological specimens or in embalming or medically as a fungicide or antiseptic |
| thym | hormone secreted by the thymus |