| ipomoea | <botany> A genus of twining plants with showy monopetalous flowers, including the morning-glory, the sweet potato, and the cypress vine. Origin: NL. "Named, according to Linnaeus, from Gr. 'ips, 'ipos, a bindweed [which it is not. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| Ipomoea rubrocoerulea | The seeds contain lysergic acid amide, isolysergic acid amide, chanoclavine, elymoclavine, and other ergot (indole) alkaloids; ingestion of the seeds produces hallucinatory and euphoric effects. Synonym: morning glory. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Ipomoea versicolor | A species whose seeds contain hallucinogenic ergot (indole) alkaloids. (05 Mar 2000) |
Synonyms :
Synonyms : Pseudo-Yam
Synonyms : Japanese Morning Glory, Pharbitis nil
| Ipomoea |
morning glory
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| ipomoea | morning glory |
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| ipomoea | pantropical climber having white fragrant nocturnal flowers |
| ipomoea | pantropical vine widely cultivated in several varieties for its large sweet tuberous root with orange flesh |
| ipomoea | annual herb having scarlet flowers |
| ipomoea | tropical American prostrate or climbing herbaceous perennial having an enormous starchy root |
| ipomoea | hybrid from Ipomoea nil |
| ipomoea | long-rooted morning glory of western United States |
| ipomoea | annual Old World tropical climbing herb distinguished by wide color range and frilled or double flowers |
| ipomoea | tropical American morning glory |
| ipomoea | tropical American prostrate or climbing herbaceous perennial having an enormous starchy root |
| ipomoea | Prostrate perennial of coastal sand dunes Florida to Texas |
| ipomoea | pantropical annual climbing herb with funnel-shaped blue, purple, pink or white flowers |
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