Dictionary Definition
flower
Noun
1 a plant cultivated for its blooms or
blossoms
2 reproductive organ of angiosperm plants
especially one having showy or colorful parts [syn: bloom, blossom]
3 the period of greatest prosperity or
productivity [syn: prime,
peak, heyday, bloom, blossom, efflorescence, flush] v : produce or yield
flowers; "The cherry tree bloomed" [syn: bloom, blossom]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From flour < flor < Latin accusative florem < nominative flos < Proto-Indo-European base *|bhlo-, extended form of *|bhel-.Homophones
Noun
- A reproductive
structure in angiosperms (flowering
plants), typically including sepals, petals, stamens, and ovaries; often conspicuously
colourful.
- 1894, H. G.
Wells,
The Flowering of the Strange Orchid
- You know, Darwin studied their fertilisation, and showed that the whole structure of an ordinary orchid flower was contrived in order that moths might carry the pollen from plant to plant.
- 1894, H. G.
Wells,
The Flowering of the Strange Orchid
- vulgar hypocoristic The vulva, especially the labia majora.
- An inflorescence that resembles a flower, but actually contains many small florets, such as a sunflower.
- A plant that bears
flowers.
- We transplanted the flowers to a larger pot.
- In the context of "usually with in": Of plants, a state of bearing
blooms.
- The dogwoods are in flower this week.
- The best examples or
representatives of a group.
- We selected the flower of the applicants.
- The best state of
things; the prime.
- She was in the flower of her life.
Synonyms
- head, pseudanthium
- sense best examples cream
- sense best state of things prime
Translations
reproductive structure in angiosperms
- Albanian: lule
- Arabic: (záhra) , (zuhúːr) p, (az-háːr) p
- Aramaic:
- Armenian: ծաղիկ (tzagheek)
- Basque: lore
- Bengali: পুল
- Bosnian: cvijet
- Breton: bleuñv (collective), bleuñvienn f s, bleunienn , boked , fleur (collective)
- Bulgarian: цвете
- Catalan: flor
- Chinese:
- Crimean Tatar: şeşek
- Croatian: cvijet
- Czech: květ, květina
- Danish: blomst
- Dutch: bloem
- Esperanto: floro
- Estonian: lill
- Faroese: blóma, blomstur
- Finnish: kukka
- French: fleur
- Galician: flor
- Georgian: ყვავილი (q‘vavili)
- German: Blume
- Greek: ανθός, άνθος, ανθί, λουλούδι
- Gujarati: ફૂલ (phūl), પુષ્પ (puśp), સુમન (suman)
- Hawaiian: pua
- Hebrew: פרח
- Hindi: फूल (phūl) , पुष्प (puśp)
- Hungarian: virág
- Icelandic: blóm
- Indonesian: bunga, kembang, puspa
- Interlingua: flor
- Inuktitut: nunangoark, perusiatsiark
- Italian: fiore
- Japanese: 花 (はな, haná)
- trreq Kannada
- Korean: 꽃
- Kurdish: gul, kulîlk,
- Lakota: wanahca
- Lao: (döökmai)
- Latin: flos
- Lithuanian: žiedas
- Malay: bunga
- Malayalam: പൂവ്, പുഷ്പം, ഏറ്റവും നല്ല ഭാഗം, കണ്ണായ ഭാഗം
- Maltese: fjura
- Maori: putiputi, puāwai
- Mongolian: цэцэг (cêcêg)
- Nahuatl: xochitl
- trreq Nepali
- Northern Sami: rássi
- Norwegian: blomst
- Ojibwe: waabigwan, waabigwaniin p
- trreq Oriya
- Persian: (gol)
- Polish: kwiat
- Portuguese: flor
- Punjabi: ਫੁੱਲ
- Rohingya: fúl
- Romani: luludyi
- Romanian: floare
- Russian: цветок, цветы
- Samoan: fuga
- Sanskrit: पुष्प
- Scottish Gaelic: blàth
- Serbian:
- Sinhala: මල (mala)
- Slovak: kvet
- Slovene: cvet
- Spanish: flor
- Swahili: ua s, maua pl (noun 5/6)
- Swedish: blomma
- Tagalog: bulaklak
- trreq Tahitian
- Tamazight: ⴰⵊⴻⴷⴷⵉⴳ (ajeddig)
- Tamil: மலர் (malar), பூ (pū)
- Telugu: పువ్వు (puvvu), పుష్పము (pushpamu)
- Thai: (dààwk), (dààwk māāi)
- trreq Tibetan
- trreq Tongan
- Turkish: çiçek
- Ukrainian: цвіт (tsvit)
- Urdu:
- Vietnamese: hoa
- Volapük: flor
- Welsh: blodyn
- West Frisian: blom
- Yiddish: בלום, קווייט
Verb
- To put forth blooms.
- To reach a state of full development or great achievement.
Quotations
- 1927-1929 — Mahatma
Gandhi,
An Autobiography or The Story of my Experiments with Truth,
Part III (IX)
Simple Life, translated 1940 by Mahadev
Desai
- It only needed watering to take root, to flower and to fructify, and the watering came in due course.
Synonyms
- sense to put forth blooms bloom, blossom
Translations
to put forth blooms
- Arabic: (az-hára), (izdáhara)
- Breton: bleuniañ
- Bulgarian: цъфтя (tsăftja)
- Czech: kvést
- Danish: blomstre
- Dutch: bloeien, openbloeien
- Finnish: kukkia
- French: fleurir, s'épanouir
- German: blühen
- Greek: ανθώ [anˈθo̞], ανθίζω [anˈθizo̞], λουλουδίζω [luluˈðizo̞]
- Hebrew: פרח (parakh) vi; הפריח (hifriikha) vt
- Icelandic: blómstra
- Indonesian: berkembang
- Interlingua: florer, florescer
- Inuktitut: erkpakpok
- Italian: fiorire
- Japanese: 咲く (さく, sakú)
- Korean: 피다
- Latin: florere; florescere (begin to blossom); efflorescere (break into bloom)
- Maltese: iffjorixxa
- Ojibwe: baashkaabigwanii
- Polish: kwitnąć
- Portuguese: florir, florescer
- Russian: цвести
- Slovene: cveteti
- Spanish: florecer
- Swahili: -sitawi, -bariki, -chanua
- Swedish: blomma
- Thai: (yāāem), (dtààek bplee)
- Urdu:
- Volapük: florön
Related terms
Derived terms
See also
Anagrams
Extensive Definition
A flower, also known as a bloom or blossom, is the reproductive structure
found in flowering
plants (plants of the division Magnoliophyta,
also called angiosperms). The biological function of a flower is to
mediate the union of male sperm with female ovum in order to
produce seeds. The process begins with pollination, is followed by
fertilization, leading to the formation and dispersal of the seeds.
For the higher plants, seeds are the next generation, and serve as
the primary means by which individuals of a species are dispersed
across the landscape. The grouping of flowers on a plant are called
the inflorescence.
In addition to serving as the reproductive organs
of flowering plants, flowers have long been admired and used by
humans, mainly to beautify their environment but also as a source
of food.
Flower specialization and pollination
Each flower has a specific design which best encourages the transfer of its pollen. Cleistogamous flowers are self pollinated, after which, they may or may not open. Many Viola and some Salvia species are known to have these types of flowers.Entomophilous
flowers attract and use insects, bats, birds or other animals
to transfer pollen from one flower to the next. Flowers commonly
have glands called nectaries on their various parts
that attract these animals. Some flowers have patterns, called
nectar guides, that show pollinators where to look for nectar.
Flowers also attract pollinators by scent and color. Still other
flowers use mimicry to attract pollinators. Some species of
orchids, for example, produce flowers resembling female bees in
color, shape, and scent. Flowers are also specialized in shape and
have an arrangement of the stamens that ensures that pollen
grains are transferred to the bodies of the pollinator when it
lands in search of its attractant (such as nectar, pollen, or a
mate). In pursuing this attractant from many flowers of the same
species, the pollinator transfers pollen to the stigmas—arranged with equally
pointed precision—of all of the flowers it visits.
Anemophilous
flowers use the wind to move pollen from one flower to the
next, examples include the grasses, Birch trees, Ragweed and
Maples. They have no need to attract pollinators and therefore tend
not to be "showy" flowers. Male and female reproductive organs are
generally found in separate flowers, the male flowers having a
number of long filaments terminating in exposed stamens, and the
female flowers having long, feather-like stigmas. Whereas the
pollen of entomophilous flowers tends to be large-grained, sticky,
and rich in protein
(another "reward" for pollinators), anemophilous flower pollen is
usually small-grained, very light, and of little nutritional value
to insects.
Morphology
Flowering plants are heterosporangiate, producing two types of reproductive spores. The pollen (male spores) and ovules (female spores) are produced in different organs, but the typical flower is a bisporangiate strobilus in that it contains both organs.A flower is regarded as a modified stem with
shortened internodes and bearing, at its nodes,
structures that may be highly modified leaves. In essence, a flower
structure forms on a modified shoot or axis with an apical meristem that does not grow
continuously (growth is determinate). Flowers may be attached to
the plant in a few ways. If the flower has no stem but forms in the
axil of a leaf, it is called sessile. When one flower is produced,
the stem holding the flower is called a peduncle.
If the peduncle ends with groups of flowers, each stem that holds a
flower is called a pedicel.
The flowering stem forms a terminal end which is called the torus
or receptacle. The parts of a flower are arranged in whorls on the torus. The four main
parts or whorls (starting from the base of the flower or lowest
node and working upwards) are as follows:
- Calyx: the outer whorl of sepals; typically these are green, but are petal-like in some species.
- Corolla: the whorl of petals, which are usually thin, soft and colored to attract insects that help the process of pollination.
- Androecium (from Greek andros oikia: man's house): one or two whorls of stamens, each a filament topped by an anther where pollen is produced. Pollen contains the male gametes.
- Gynoecium (from Greek gynaikos oikia: woman's house): one or more pistils. The female reproductive organ is the carpel: this contains an ovary with ovules (which contain female gametes). A pistil may consist of a number of carpels merged together, in which case there is only one pistil to each flower, or of a single individual carpel (the flower is then called apocarpous). The sticky tip of the pistil, the stigma, is the receptor of pollen. The supportive stalk, the style becomes the pathway for pollen tubes to grow from pollen grains adhering to the stigma, to the ovules, carrying the reproductive material.
Although the floral structure described above is
considered the "typical" structural plan, plant species show a wide
variety of modifications from this plan. These modifications have
significance in the evolution of flowering plants and are used
extensively by botanists to establish relationships among plant
species. For example, the two subclasses of flowering plants may be
distinguished by the number of floral organs in each whorl:
dicotyledons
typically having 4 or 5 organs (or a multiple of 4 or 5) in each
whorl and monocotyledons having
three or some multiple of three. The number of carpels in a
compound pistil may be only two, or otherwise not related to the
above generalization for monocots and dicots.
In the majority of species individual flowers
have both pistils and
stamens as described above. These flowers are described by
botanists as being perfect, bisexual, or hermaphrodite. However, in
some species of plants the flowers are imperfect or unisexual:
having only either male (stamens) or female (pistil) parts. In the
latter case, if an individual plant is either female or male the
species is regarded as dioecious.
However, where unisexual male and female flowers appear on the same
plant, the species is considered monoecious.
Additional discussions on floral modifications
from the basic plan are presented in the articles on each of the
basic parts of the flower. In those species that have more than one
flower on an axis—so-called composite flowers—the collection of
flowers is termed an inflorescence; this term
can also refer to the specific arrangements of flowers on a stem.
In this regard, care must be exercised in considering what a
‘‘flower’’ is. In botanical terminology, a single daisy or sunflower for example, is not
a flower but a flower head—an
inflorescence composed of numerous tiny flowers (sometimes called
florets). Each of these flowers may be anatomically as described
above. Many flowers have a symmetry, if the perianth is bisected
through the central axis from any point, symmetrical halves are
produced—the flower is called regular or actinomorphic, e.g. rose
or trillium. When flowers are bisected and produce only one line
that produces symmetrical halves the flower is said to be irregular
or zygomorphic. e.g. snapdragon or most orchids.
Floral formula
A floral formula is a way to represent the structure of a flower using specific letters, numbers, and symbols. Typically, a general formula will be used to represent the flower structure of a plant family rather than a particular species. The following representations are used:Ca = calyx (sepal whorl; e.g. Ca5 = 5 sepals) Co
= corolla (petal whorl; e.g., Co3(x) = petals some multiple of
three ) Z = add if
zygomorphic (e.g., CoZ6 = zygomorphic with 6 petals) A = androecium
(whorl of stamens; e.g., A∞ = many stamens) G = gynoecium (carpel
or carpels; e.g., G1 = monocarpous)
x: to represent a "variable number" ∞: to
represent "many"
A floral formula would appear something like
this:
- Ca5Co5A10 - ∞G1
Several additional symbols are sometimes used
(see Key to
Floral Formulas).
Pollination
The primary purpose of a flower is reproduction. Flowers are the reproductive organs and mediate the joining of the sperm contained within pollen to the ovules, normally from one plant to another but many plants also can pollinate their own flowers. The fertilized ovules produce seeds that are the next generation. Sexual reproduction produces genetically unique offspring, allowing for adaptation. Flowers have specific designs which encourages the transfer of pollen from one plant to another of the same species. Many plants are dependent upon external factors to move pollen between flowers, including the wind and animals, especially insects. Even large animals such as birds, bats, and pygmy possums can be employed. The period of time during which this process can take place (the flower is fully expanded and functional) is called anthesis.Attraction methods
Some flowers with both stamens and a pistil are capable of self-fertilization, which does increase the chance of producing seeds but limits genetic variation. The extreme case of self-fertilization occurs in flowers that always self-fertilize, such as many dandelions. Conversely, many species of plants have ways of preventing self-fertilization. Unisexual male and female flowers on the same plant may not appear or mature at the same time, or pollen from the same plant may be incapable of fertilizing its ovules. The latter flower types, which have chemical barriers to their own pollen, are referred to as self-sterile or self-incompatible (see also: Plant sexuality).Evolution
While land plants have existed for about 425 million years, the first ones reproduced by a simple adaptation of their aquatic counterparts: spores. In the sea, plants -- and some animals -- can simply scatter out genetic clones of themselves to float away and grow elsewhere. This is how early plants, such as the modern fern, are thought to have reproduced. But plants soon evolved methods of protecting these copies to deal with drying out and other abuse which is even more likely on land than in the sea. The protection became the seed, though it had not yet evolved the flower. Early seed-bearing plants include the ginkgo and conifers. The earliest fossil of a flowering plant, Archaefructus liaoningensis, is dated about 125 million years old. Several groups of extinct gymnosperms, particularly seed ferns, have been proposed as the ancestors of flowering plants but there is no continuous fossil evidence showing exactly how flowers evolved. The apparently sudden appearance of relatively modern flowers in the fossil record posed such a problem for the theory of evolution that it was called an "abominable mystery" by Charles Darwin. Recently discovered angiosperm fossils such as Archaefructus, along with further discoveries of fossil gymnosperms, suggest how angiosperm characteristics may have been acquired in a series of steps.Recent DNA analysis (molecular
systematics) show that Amborella
trichopoda, found on the Pacific island of New
Caledonia, is the sister group
to the rest of the flowering plants, and morphological studies
suggest that it has features which may have been characteristic of
the earliest flowering plants.
The general assumption is that the function of
flowers, from the start, was to involve other animals in the
reproduction process. Pollen can be scattered without bright colors
and obvious shapes, which would therefore be a liability, using the
plant's resources, unless they provide some other benefit. One
proposed reason for the sudden, fully developed appearance of
flowers is that they evolved in an isolated setting like an island,
or chain of islands, where the plants bearing them were able to
develop a highly specialized relationship with some specific animal
(a wasp, for example), the way many island species develop today.
This symbiotic relationship, with a hypothetical wasp bearing
pollen from one plant to another much the way fig wasps do
today, could have eventually resulted in both the plant(s) and
their partners developing a high degree of specialization. Island
genetics is believed to be a common source of speciation,
especially when it comes to radical adaptations which seem to have
required inferior transitional forms. Note that the wasp example is
not incidental; bees, apparently evolved specifically for symbiotic
plant relationships, are descended from wasps.
Likewise, most fruit used in plant reproduction
comes from the enlargement of parts of the flower. This fruit is
frequently a tool which depends upon animals wishing to eat it, and
thus scattering the seeds it contains.
While many such symbiotic
relationships remain too fragile to survive competition with
mainland animals and spread, flowers proved to be an unusually
effective means of production, spreading (whatever their actual
origin) to become the dominant form of land plant life.
While there is only hard proof of such flowers
existing about 130 million years ago, there is some circumstantial
evidence that they did exist up to 250 million years ago. A
chemical used by plants to defend their flowers, oleanane, has been detected in
fossil plants that old, including gigantopterids, which
evolved at that time and bear many of the traits of modern,
flowering plants, though they are not known to be flowering plants
themselves, because only their stems and prickles have been found
preserved in detail; one of the earliest examples of petrification.
The similarity in leaf and stem structure
can be very important, because flowers are genetically just an
adaptation of normal leaf and stem components on plants, a
combination of genes normally responsible for forming new shoots.
The most primitive flowers are thought to have had a variable
number of flower parts, often separate from (but in contact with)
each other. The flowers would have tended to grow in a spiral
pattern, to be bisexual
(in plants, this means both male and female parts on the same
flower), and to be dominated by the ovary
(female part). As flowers grew more advanced, some variations
developed parts fused together, with a much more specific number
and design, and with either specific sexes per flower or plant, or
at least "ovary inferior".
Flower evolution continues to the present day;
modern flowers have been so profoundly influenced by humans that
many of them cannot be pollinated in nature. Many modern,
domesticated flowers used to be simple weeds, which only sprouted
when the ground was disturbed. Some of them tended to grow with
human crops, and the prettiest did not get plucked because of their
beauty, developing a dependence upon and special adaptation to
human affection.
Development
The molecular control of floral organ identity determination is fairly well understood. In a simple model, three gene activities interact in a combinatorial manner to determine the developmental identities of the organ primordia within the floral meristem. These gene functions are called A, B and C-gene functions. In the first floral whorl only A-genes are expressed, leading to the formation of sepals. In the second whorl both A- and B-genes are expressed, leading to the formation of petals. In the third whorl, B and C genes interact to form stamens and in the center of the flower C-genes alone give rise to carpels. The model is based upon studies of homeotic mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana and snapdragon, Antirrhinum majus. For example, when there is a loss of B-gene function, mutant flowers are produced with sepals in the first whorl as usual, but also in the second whorl instead of the normal petal formation. In the third whorl the lack of B function but presence of C-function mimics the fourth whorl, leading to the formation of carpels also in the third whorl. See also The ABC Model of Flower Development.Most genes central in this model belong to the
MADS-box
genes and are transcription
factors that regulate the expression of the genes specific for
each floral organ.
Flowering transition
The transition to flowering is one of the major phase changes that a plant makes during its life cycle. The transition must take place at a time that will ensure maximal reproductive success. To meet these needs a plant is able to interpret important endogenous and environmental cues such as changes in plant hormones levels and seasonable temperature and photoperiodchanges. Many perennial and most biennial plants require vernalization to flower. The molecular interpretation of these signals through genes such as CONSTANS and FLC ensures that flowering occurs at a time that is favorable for fertilization and the formation of seeds. Flower formation is initiated at the ends of stems, and involves a number of different physiological and morphological changes. The first step is the transformation of the vegetative stem primordia into floral primordia. This occurs as biochemical changes take place to change cellular differentiation of leaf, bud and stem tissues into tissue that will grow into the reproductive organs. Growth of the central part of the stem tip stops or flattens out and the sides develop protuberances in a whorled or spiral fashion around the outside of the stem end. These protuberances develop into the sepals, petals, stamens, and carpels. Once this process begins, in most plants, it cannot be reversed and the stems develop flowers, even if the initial start of the flower formation event was dependent of some environmental cue. Once the process begins, even if that cue is removed the stem will continue to develop a flower.Symbolism
Many flowers have important symbolic meanings in Western culture. The practice of assigning meanings to flowers is known as floriography. Some of the more common examples include:- Red roses are given as a symbol of love, beauty, and passion.
- Poppies are a symbol of consolation in time of death. In the UK, New Zealand, Australia and Canada, red poppies are worn to commemorate soldiers who have died in times of war.
- Irises/Lily are used in burials as a symbol referring to "resurrection/life". It is also associated with stars (sun) and its petals blooming/shining.
- Daisies are a symbol of innocence.
Flowers within art are also representative of the
female
genitalia, as seen in the works of artists such as Georgia
O'Keefe, Imogen
Cunningham, Veronica
Ruiz de Velasco, and Judy
Chicago, and in fact in Asian and western classical art. Many
cultures around the world have a marked tendency to associate
flowers with femininity.
The great variety of delicate and beautiful
flowers has inspired the works of numerous poets, especially from
the 18th-19th century Romantic
era. Famous examples include William
Wordsworth's
I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud and William
Blake's Ah! Sun-Flower.
Because of their varied and colorful appearance,
flowers have long been a favorite subject of visual artists as
well. Some of the most celebrated paintings from well-known
painters are of flowers, such as Van
Gogh's
sunflowers series or Monet's
water lilies. Flowers are also dried, freeze dried and pressed in
order to create permanent, three-dimensional pieces of flower
art.
The Roman goddess of flowers, gardens, and the
season of Spring is Flora.
The Greek goddess of spring, flowers and nature is Chloris.
In Hindu mythology,
flowers have a significant status. Vishnu, one of the
three major gods in the Hindu system, is
often depicted standing straight on a lotus flower. Apart from the
association with Vishnu, the Hindu
tradition also considers the lotus to have spiritual significance.
For example, it figures in the Hindu stories of creation.
Usage
In modern times, people have sought ways to cultivate, buy, wear, or otherwise be around flowers and blooming plants, partly because of their agreeable appearance and smell. Around the world, people use flowers for a wide range of events and functions that, cumulatively, encompass one's lifetime:- For new births or Christenings
- As a corsage or boutonniere to be worn at social functions or for holidays
- As tokens of love or esteem
- For wedding flowers for the bridal party, and decorations for the hall
- As brightening decorations within the home
- As a gift of remembrance for bon voyage parties, welcome home parties, and "thinking of you" gifts
- For funeral flowers and expressions of sympathy for the grieving
People therefore grow flowers around their homes,
dedicate entire parts of their living space to flower
gardens, pick wildflowers, or buy flowers from florists who depend on an entire
network of commercial growers and shippers to support their
trade.
Flowers provide less food than other major plants
parts (seeds, fruits, roots, stems and
leaves) but they provide
several important foods and spices. Flower vegetables include
broccoli, cauliflower and artichoke. The most expensive
spice, saffron, consists
of dried stigmas of a crocus. Other flower spices are
cloves and capers. Hops flowers are used
to flavor beer. Marigold flowers
are fed to chickens to
give their egg yolks a golden yellow color, which consumers find
more desirable. Dandelion flowers
are often made into wine. Bee Pollen, pollen
collected from bees, is considered a health food by some people.
Honey
consists of bee-processed flower nectar and is often named for the
type of flower, e.g. orange
blossom honey, clover
honey and tupelo
honey.
Hundreds of fresh flowers are edible but few are
widely marketed as food. They are often used to add color and
flavor to salads. Squash
flowers are dipped in breadcrumbs and fried. Edible flowers include
nasturtium, chrysanthemum, carnation, cattail, honeysuckle, chicory, cornflower, Canna, and
sunflower. Some edible
flowers are sometimes candied such as daisy and rose (you may also come across a
candied pansy).
Flowers can also be made into herbal teas.
Dried flowers such as chrysanthemum, rose, jasmine, camomile are
infused into tea both for their fragrance and medical properties.
Sometimes, they are also mixed with tea
leaves for the added fragrance.
See also
References
- Eames, A. J. (1961) Morphology of the Angiosperms McGraw-Hill Book Co., New York.
- Esau, Katherine (1965) Plant Anatomy (2nd ed.) John Wiley & Sons, New York.
External links
flower in Arabic: زهرة
flower in Guarani: Yvoty
flower in Aymara: Panqara
flower in Azerbaijani: Çiçək
flower in Min Nan: Hoe
flower in Tibetan: མེ་ཏོག་
flower in Bulgarian: Цвете
flower in Catalan: Flor
flower in Czech: Květ
flower in Welsh: Blodeuyn
flower in Danish: Blomst
flower in German: Blume
flower in Estonian: Õis
flower in Modern Greek (1453-): Άνθος
flower in Spanish: Flor
flower in Esperanto: Floro
flower in Persian: گل (گیاه)
flower in French: Fleur
flower in Galician: Flor
flower in Korean: 꽃
flower in Croatian: Cvijet
flower in Ido: Floro
flower in Indonesian: Bunga
flower in Inuktitut: ᐱᕈᖅᑐᓴᔭᖅ/piruqtusajaq
flower in Icelandic: Blóm
flower in Italian: Fiore
flower in Hebrew: פרח
flower in Latin: Flos
flower in Lithuanian: Žiedas
flower in Hungarian: Virág
flower in Macedonian: Цвет
flower in Malay (macrolanguage):
Bunga
nah:Xōchitl
flower in Dutch: Bloem (plant)
flower in Dutch Low Saxon: Bloeme
flower in Cree: ᐧᐋᐱᑯᓐ
flower in Japanese: 花
flower in Norwegian: Blomst
flower in Norwegian Nynorsk: Blome
flower in Polish: Kwiat
flower in Portuguese: Flor
flower in Romanian: Floare
flower in Quechua: Wayta
flower in Russian: Цветок
flower in Sicilian: Ciuri
flower in Simple English: Flower
flower in Slovenian: Cvet
flower in Serbian: Цвет
flower in Sundanese: Kembang
flower in Finnish: Kukka
flower in Swedish: Blomma
flower in Tamil: மலர்
flower in Thai: ดอกไม้
flower in Vietnamese: Hoa
flower in Turkish: Çiçek
flower in Ukrainian: Квітка
flower in Venetian: Fior
flower in Yiddish: בלום
flower in Chinese: 花
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Chinese lantern, Christmas rose, Eglantine, acacia, advance, androecium, anther, arrowhead, asiaticism, aster, attain majority, axiom, azalea, batten, bead, bear fruit, bejewel, beribbon, bespangle, best, bleeding heart, bloom, blossom, blow, bluebell, boom, broom, bud, budding, burgeon, burgeoning, buttercup, cactus, calendula, calyx, camellia, carnation, carpel, center, champion, choice, chosen, chrysanthemum, cineraria, clematis, clethra, cockscomb, columbine, come of age, come
out, come to maturity, core, cornel, cornflower, corolla, corolla tube, corona, cosmos, cowslip, cream, crocus, cyclamen, daffodil, dahlia, daisy, dandelion, delphinium, develop, device, diamond, dogwood, duckweed, edelweiss, effloresce, efflorescence, elect, elite, elixir, engrave, epicalyx, essence, essential, euphuism, evolute, evolve, fat, fatten, feather, figurative language,
figurativeness,
figure, figure of speech,
filigree, finest, flag, flax, fledge, fleur-de-lis, floret, floriculture, floridity, floscule, flounce, flourish, floweret, flowery style,
focus, forget-me-not,
forsythia, foxglove, foxtail, fuchsia, fundamental, gardenia, gardening, garland, gem, gentility, gentry, geranium, germination, gist, gravamen, groundsel, grow, grow fat, grow up, growth, gynoecium, hawthorn, heart, heather, hibiscus, honeysuckle, horehound, horticulture, hortorium, hyacinth, hydrangea, hypostasis, illuminate, image, imagery, impatience, indigo, inner essence, iris, jasmine, jewel, jonquil, kernel, lavender, leave the nest,
lilac, lily, lobelia, lotus, lupine, luxuriation, magnolia, mallow, manner of speaking,
marigold, marrow, marsh marigold, marshmallow, maturate, mature, mayflower, meat, megasporophyll, mellow, microsporophyll,
mignonette, moccasin
flower, mock orange, monkshood, motherwort, myrtle, narcissus, nonesuch, nonliterality, nonliteralness, nonpareil, nub, nucleus, nuts and bolts,
oleander, open, optimum, orchid, ornament, oxalis, paint, pansy, paragon, peony, perianth, periwinkle, petal, phlox, pick, pink, pistil, pith, plume, poppy, postulate, posy, pride, prime, primrose, principle, prize, progress, pullulation, purple passage,
quality, queen, quid, quiddity, quintessence, ranunculus, reach manhood,
reach twenty-one, reach voting age, receptacle, resurrection
plant, rhododendron, ribbon, ripen, rose, sap, season, select, settle down, shoot, shooting star, snapdragon, snowball, snowberry, snowdrop, society, soul, spangle, spiraea, spirit, spray, sprouting, stamen, stigma, stock, strawflower, stuff, style, substance, sunflower, superlative, sweet William,
sweet alyssum, sweet pea, temper, the best, the best ever,
the nitty-gritty, the tops, the very best, thrive, tinsel, toga virilis, top, torus, trillium, trope, tulip, turn of expression,
umbrella plant, unfold,
upper class, upper crust, vegetation, verbena, vetch, viola, violet, wallflower, water lily,
wax, way of speaking,
wildflower, wisteria, wolfbane, wreathe, yarrow, yucca, zinnia