Found 1 items, similar to Arrhenatherum avenaceum.
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Definition: Arrhenatherum avenaceum
Grass
\Grass\, n. [OE. gras, gres, gers, AS, gr[ae]s, g[ae]rs;
akin to OFries. gres, gers, OS., D., G., Icel., & Goth. gras,
Dan. gr[ae]s, Sw. gr[aum]s, and prob. to E. green, grow. Cf.
Graze.]
1. Popularly: Herbage; the plants which constitute the food
of cattle and other beasts; pasture.
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2. (Bot.) An endogenous plant having simple leaves, a stem
generally jointed and tubular, the husks or glumes in
pairs, and the seed single.
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Note: This definition includes wheat, rye, oats, barley,
etc., and excludes clover and some other plants which
are commonly called by the name of grass. The grasses
form a numerous family of plants.
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3. The season of fresh grass; spring. [Colloq.]
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Two years old next grass. --Latham.
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4. Metaphorically used for what is transitory.
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Surely the people is grass. --Is. xl. 7.
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Note: The following list includes most of the grasses of the
United States of special interest, except cereals. Many
of these terms will be found with definitions in the
Vocabulary. See Illustrations in Appendix. Barnyard
grass, for hay. South.
Panicum Grus-galli. Bent,
pasture and hay.
Agrostis, several species. Bermuda
grass, pasture. South.
Cynodon Dactylon. Black bent.
Same as
Switch grass (below). Blue bent, hay. North
and West.
Andropogon provincialis. Blue grass,
pasture.
Poa compressa. Blue joint, hay. Northwest.
Aqropyrum glaucum. Buffalo grass, grazing. Rocky
Mts., etc.
(a)
Buchlo["e] dectyloides.
(b) Same as
Grama grass (below). Bunch grass, grazing.
Far West.
Eriocoma,
Festuca,
Stips, etc. Chess,
or Cheat, a weed.
Bromus secalinus, etc. Couch
grass. Same as
Quick grass (below). Crab grass,
(a) Hay, in South. A weed, in North.
Panicum sanguinale.
(b) Pasture and hay. South.
Eleusine Indica. Darnel
(a) Bearded, a noxious weed.
Lolium temulentum.
(b) Common. Same as
Rye grass (below). Drop seed, fair
for forage and hay.
Muhlenbergia, several species.
English grass. Same as Redtop (below). Fowl meadow
grass.
(a) Pasture and hay.
Poa serotina.
(b) Hay, on moist land.
Gryceria nervata. Gama grass,
cut fodder. South.
Tripsacum dactyloides. Grama
grass, grazing. West and Pacific slope.
Bouteloua oligostachya
, etc. Great bunch grass, pasture and
hay. Far West.
Festuca scabrella. Guinea grass, hay.
South.
Panicum jumentorum. Herd's grass, in New
England Timothy, in Pennsylvania and South Redtop.
Indian grass. Same as
Wood grass (below). Italian
rye grass, forage and hay.
Lolium Italicum. Johnson
grass, grazing and hay. South and Southwest.
Sorghum Halepense
. Kentucky blue grass, pasture.
Poa pratensis
. Lyme grass, coarse hay. South.
Elymus,
several species. Manna grass, pasture and hay.
Glyceria, several species. Meadow fescue, pasture
and hay.
Festuca elatior. Meadow foxtail, pasture,
hay, lawn. North.
Alopecurus pratensis. Meadow
grass, pasture, hay, lawn.
Poa, several species.
Mesquite grass, or Muskit grass. Same as
Grama grass
(above). Nimble Will, a kind of drop seed.
Muhlenbergia diffsa. Orchard grass, pasture and hay.
Dactylis glomerata. Porcupine grass, troublesome to
sheep. Northwest.
Stipa spartea. Quaking grass,
ornamental.
Briza media and
maxima. Quitch, or
Quick, grass, etc., a weed.
Agropyrum repens. Ray
grass. Same as
Rye grass (below). Redtop, pasture
and hay.
Agrostis vulgaris. Red-topped buffalo
grass, forage. Northwest.
Poa tenuifolia. Reed
canary grass, of slight value.
Phalaris arundinacea.
Reed meadow grass, hay. North.
Glyceria aquatica.
Ribbon grass, a striped leaved form of
Reed canary grass
. Rye grass, pasture, hay.
Lolium perenne,
var. Seneca grass, fragrant basket work, etc. North.
Hierochloa borealis. Sesame grass. Same as
Gama grass
(above). Sheep's fescue, sheep pasture, native
in Northern Europe and Asia.
Festuca ovina. Small
reed grass, meadow pasture and hay. North.
Deyeuxia Canadensis
. Spear grass, Same as
Meadow grass
(above). Squirrel-tail grass, troublesome to animals.
Seacoast and Northwest.
Hordeum jubatum. Switch
grass, hay, cut young.
Panicum virgatum. Timothy,
cut young, the best of hay. North.
Phleum pratense.
Velvet grass, hay on poor soil. South.
Holcus lanatus
. Vernal grass, pasture, hay, lawn.
Anthoxanthum odoratum. Wire grass, valuable in
pastures.
Poa compressa. Wood grass, Indian grass,
hay.
Chrysopogon nutans.
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Note: Many plants are popularly called grasses which are not
true grasses botanically considered, such as black
grass, goose grass, star grass, etc.
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Black grass, a kind of small rush (
Juncus Gerardi),
growing in salt marshes, used for making salt hay.
Grass of the Andes, an oat grass, the
Arrhenatherum avenaceum
of Europe.
Grass of Parnassus, a plant of the genus
Parnassia
growing in wet ground. The European species is
Parnassia palustris
; in the United States there are several
species.
Grass bass (Zo["o]l.), the calico bass.
Grass bird, the dunlin.
Grass cloth, a cloth woven from the tough fibers of the
grass-cloth plant.
Grass-cloth plant, a perennial herb of the Nettle family
(
B[oe]hmeria nivea syn.
Urtica nivea), which grows in
Sumatra, China, and Assam, whose inner bark has fine and
strong fibers suited for textile purposes.
Grass finch. (Zo["o]l.)
(a) A common American sparrow (
Po["o]c[ae]tes gramineus
); -- called also
vesper sparrow and
bay-winged bunting.
(b) Any Australian finch, of the genus
Po["e]phila, of
which several species are known.
Grass lamb, a lamb suckled by a dam running on pasture land
and giving rich milk.
Grass land, land kept in grass and not tilled.
Grass moth (Zo["o]l.), one of many small moths of the genus
Crambus, found in grass.
Grass oil, a fragrant essential volatile oil, obtained in
India from grasses of the genus
Andropogon, etc.; --
used in perfumery under the name of
citronella,
ginger grass oil
,
lemon grass oil,
essence of verbena etc.
Grass owl (Zo["o]l.), a South African owl (
Strix Capensis
).
Grass parrakeet (Zo["o]l.), any of several species of
Australian parrots, of the genus
Euphemia; -- also
applied to the zebra parrakeet.
Grass plover (Zo["o]l.), the upland or field plover.
Grass poly (Bot.), a species of willowwort (
Lythrum Hyssopifolia
). --Johnson.
Crass quit (Zo["o]l.), one of several tropical American
finches of the genus
Euetheia. The males have most of
the head and chest black and often marked with yellow.
Grass snake. (Zo["o]l.)
(a) The common English, or ringed, snake (
Tropidonotus natrix
).
(b) The common green snake of the Northern United States.
See
Green snake, under
Green.
Grass snipe (Zo["o]l.), the pectoral sandpiper (
Tringa maculata
); -- called also
jacksnipe in America.
Grass spider (Zo["o]l.), a common spider (
Agelena n[ae]via
), which spins flat webs on grass, conspicuous
when covered with dew.
Grass sponge (Zo["o]l.), an inferior kind of commercial
sponge from Florida and the Bahamas.
Grass table. (Arch.) See
Earth table, under
Earth.
Grass vetch (Bot.), a vetch (
Lathyrus Nissolia), with
narrow grasslike leaves.
Grass widow. [Cf. Prov. R. an unmarried mother, G.
strohwittwe a mock widow, Sw. gr["a]senka a grass widow.]
(a) An unmarried woman who is a mother. [Obs.]
(b) A woman separated from her husband by abandonment or
prolonged absence; a woman living apart from her
husband. [Slang.]
Grass wrack (Bot.) eelgrass.
To bring to grass (Mining.), to raise, as ore, to the
surface of the ground.
To put to grass,
To put out to grass, to put out to graze
a season, as cattle.
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Oat
\Oat\ ([=o]t), n.; pl.
Oats ([=o]ts). [OE. ote, ate, AS.
[=a]ta, akin to Fries. oat. Of uncertain origin.]
1. (Bot.) A well-known cereal grass (
Avena sativa), and its
edible grain, used as food and fodder; -- commonly used in
the plural and in a collective sense.
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2. A musical pipe made of oat straw. [Obs.] --Milton.
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Animated oats or
Animal oats (Bot.), A grass (
Avena sterilis
) much like oats, but with a long spirally
twisted awn which coils and uncoils with changes of
moisture, and thus gives the grains an apparently
automatic motion.
Oat fowl (Zo["o]l.), the snow bunting; -- so called from
its feeding on oats. [Prov. Eng.]
Oat grass (Bot.), the name of several grasses more or less
resembling oats, as
Danthonia spicata,
Danthonia sericea
, and
Arrhenatherum avenaceum, all common in
parts of the United States.
To feel one's oats,
(a) to be conceited or self-important. [Slang]
(b) to feel lively and energetic.
To sow one's wild oats, to indulge in youthful dissipation.
--Thackeray.
Wild oats (Bot.), a grass (
Avena fatua) much resembling
oats, and by some persons supposed to be the original of
cultivated oats.
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Wild
\Wild\, a. [Compar.
Wilder; superl.
Wildest.] [OE.
wilde, AS. wilde; akin to OFries. wilde, D. wild, OS. & OHG.
wildi, G. wild, Sw. & Dan. vild, Icel. villr wild,
bewildered, astray, Goth. wilpeis wild, and G. & OHG. wild
game, deer; of uncertain origin.]
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1. Living in a state of nature; inhabiting natural haunts, as
the forest or open field; not familiar with, or not easily
approached by, man; not tamed or domesticated; as, a wild
boar; a wild ox; a wild cat.
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Winter's not gone yet, if the wild geese fly that
way. --Shak.
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2. Growing or produced without culture; growing or prepared
without the aid and care of man; native; not cultivated;
brought forth by unassisted nature or by animals not
domesticated; as, wild parsnip, wild camomile, wild
strawberry, wild honey.
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The woods and desert caves,
With wild thyme and gadding vine o'ergrown.
--Milton.
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3. Desert; not inhabited or cultivated; as, wild land.
“To
trace the forests wild.” --Shak.
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4. Savage; uncivilized; not refined by culture; ferocious;
rude; as, wild natives of Africa or America.
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5. Not submitted to restraint, training, or regulation;
turbulent; tempestuous; violent; ungoverned; licentious;
inordinate; disorderly; irregular; fanciful; imaginary;
visionary; crazy.
“Valor grown wild by pride.” --Prior.
“A wild, speculative project.” --Swift.
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What are these
So withered and so wild in their attire ? --Shak.
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With mountains, as with weapons, armed; which makes
Wild work in heaven. --Milton.
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The wild winds howl. --Addison.
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Search then the ruling passion, there, alone
The wild are constant, and the cunning known.
--Pope.
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6. Exposed to the wind and sea; unsheltered; as, a wild
roadstead.
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7. Indicating strong emotion, intense excitement, or
?ewilderment; as, a wild look.
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8. (Naut.) Hard to steer; -- said of a vessel.
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Note: Many plants are named by prefixing wild to the names of
other better known or cultivated plants to which they a
bear a real or fancied resemblance; as, wild allspice,
wild pink, etc. See the Phrases below.
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To run wild, to go unrestrained or untamed; to live or
untamed; to live or grow without culture or training.
To sow one's wild oats. See under
Oat.
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Wild allspice. (Bot.), spicewood.
Wild balsam apple (Bot.), an American climbing
cucurbitaceous plant (
Echinocystis lobata).
Wild basil (Bot.), a fragrant labiate herb (
Calamintha Clinopodium
) common in Europe and America.
Wild bean (Bot.), a name of several leguminous plants,
mostly species of
Phaseolus and
Apios.
Wild bee (Zo["o]l.), any one of numerous species of
undomesticated social bees, especially the domestic bee
when it has escaped from domestication and built its nest
in a hollow tree or among rocks.
Wild bergamot. (Bot.) See under
Bergamot.
Wild boar (Zo["o]l.), the European wild hog (
Sus scrofa),
from which the common domesticated swine is descended.
Wild brier (Bot.), any uncultivated species of brier. See
Brier.
Wild bugloss (Bot.), an annual rough-leaved plant
(
Lycopsis arvensis) with small blue flowers.
Wild camomile (Bot.), one or more plants of the composite
genus
Matricaria, much resembling camomile.
Wild cat. (Zo["o]l.)
(a) A European carnivore (
Felis catus) somewhat
resembling the domestic cat, but larger stronger, and
having a short tail. It is destructive to the smaller
domestic animals, such as lambs, kids, poultry, and
the like.
(b) The common American lynx, or bay lynx.
(c) (Naut.) A wheel which can be adjusted so as to revolve
either with, or on, the shaft of a capstan. --Luce.
Wild celery. (Bot.) See
Tape grass, under
Tape.
Wild cherry. (Bot.)
(a) Any uncultivated tree which bears cherries. The wild
red cherry is
Prunus Pennsylvanica. The wild black
cherry is
Prunus serotina, the wood of which is much
used for cabinetwork, being of a light red color and a
compact texture.
(b) The fruit of various species of
Prunus.
Wild cinnamon. See the Note under
Canella.
Wild comfrey (Bot.), an American plant (
Cynoglossum Virginicum
) of the Borage family. It has large bristly
leaves and small blue flowers.
Wild cumin (Bot.), an annual umbelliferous plant
(
Lag[oe]cia cuminoides) native in the countries about
the Mediterranean.
Wild drake (Zo["o]l.) the mallard.
Wild elder (Bot.), an American plant (
Aralia hispida) of
the Ginseng family.
Wild fowl (Zo["o]l.) any wild bird, especially any of those
considered as game birds.
Wild goose (Zo["o]l.), any one of several species of
undomesticated geese, especially the Canada goose (
Branta Canadensis
), the European bean goose, and the graylag.
See
Graylag, and
Bean goose, under
Bean.
Wild goose chase, the pursuit of something unattainable, or
of something as unlikely to be caught as the wild goose.
--Shak.
Wild honey, honey made by wild bees, and deposited in
trees, rocks, the like.
Wild hyacinth. (Bot.) See
Hyacinth, 1
(b) .
Wild Irishman (Bot.), a thorny bush (
Discaria Toumatou)
of the Buckthorn family, found in New Zealand, where the
natives use the spines in tattooing.
Wild land.
(a) Land not cultivated, or in a state that renders it
unfit for cultivation.
(b) Land which is not settled and cultivated.
Wild licorice. (Bot.) See under
Licorice.
Wild mammee (Bot.), the oblong, yellowish, acid fruit of a
tropical American tree (
Rheedia lateriflora); -- so
called in the West Indies.
Wild marjoram (Bot.), a labiate plant (
Origanum vulgare)
much like the sweet marjoram, but less aromatic.
Wild oat. (Bot.)
(a) A tall, oatlike kind of soft grass (
Arrhenatherum avenaceum
).
(b) See
Wild oats, under
Oat.
Wild pieplant (Bot.), a species of dock (
Rumex hymenosepalus
) found from Texas to California. Its acid,
juicy stems are used as a substitute for the garden
rhubarb.
Wild pigeon. (Zo["o]l.)
(a) The rock dove.
(b) The passenger pigeon.
Wild pink (Bot.), an American plant (
Silene Pennsylvanica
) with pale, pinkish flowers; a kind of
catchfly.
Wild plantain (Bot.), an arborescent endogenous herb
(
Heliconia Bihai), much resembling the banana. Its
leaves and leaf sheaths are much used in the West Indies
as coverings for packages of merchandise.
Wild plum. (Bot.)
(a) Any kind of plum growing without cultivation.
(b) The South African prune. See under
Prune.
Wild rice. (Bot.) See
Indian rice, under
Rice.
Wild rosemary (Bot.), the evergreen shrub
Andromeda polifolia
. See
Marsh rosemary, under
Rosemary.
Wild sage. (Bot.) See
Sagebrush.
Wild sarsaparilla (Bot.), a species of ginseng (
Aralia nudicaulis
) bearing a single long-stalked leaf.
Wild sensitive plant (Bot.), either one of two annual
leguminous herbs (
Cassia Cham[ae]crista, and
Cassia nictitans
), in both of which the leaflets close quickly
when the plant is disturbed.
Wild service.(Bot.) See
Sorb.
Wild Spaniard (Bot.), any one of several umbelliferous
plants of the genus
Aciphylla, natives of New Zealand.
The leaves bear numerous bayonetlike spines, and the
plants form an impenetrable thicket.
Wild turkey. (Zo["o]l.) See 2d
Turkey.
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