| anemone | 1. <botany> A genus of plants of the Ranunculus or Crowfoot family; windflower. Some of the species are cultivated in gardens. 2. <zoology> The sea anemone. See Actinia, and Sea anemone. This word is sometimes pronounced n-m-n, especially by classical scholars. Origin: L. Anemone, Gr, fr. Wind. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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Synonyms : Anemone hepatica, Anemone raddeana
| Anemone |
a large genus of plants of the family Ranunculaceae with divided leaves and conspicuous flowers of sepals. Most species contain ranunculin, which converts enzymatically to protoanemonin, an irritant toxin that can cause poisoning (anemonism) in humans and livestock. A. pulsatil´la and certain other species contain anemonin rather than its precursors, and have been used medicinally.
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| anemone | any woodland plant of the genus Anemone grown for its beautiful flowers and whorls of dissected leaves |
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| anemone | common summer-flowering woodland herb of Labrador to Colorado |
| anemone | a common North American anemone with cylindrical fruit clusters resembling thimbles |
| anemone | live associated with sea anemones |
| anemone | short hairy perennial with early spring blue-violet or lilac flowers |
| anemone | European anemone with solitary white flowers common in deciduous woodlands |
| anemone | of western North America |
| anemone | European perennial having usually violet or white spring flowers |
| anemone | common anemone of eastern North America with solitary pink-tinged white flowers |
| anemone | thimbleweed of northern North America |
| anemone | Eurasian herb with solitary nodding fragrant white flowers |
| anemone | silky-foliaged herb of Rocky Mts with bluish-white flowers |
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