Found 2 items, similar to Bog myrtle.
English → English (WordNet)
Definition: bog myrtle
bog myrtle
n : perennial plant of Europe and America having racemes of
white or purplish flowers and intensely bitter trifoliate
leaves; often rooting at water margin and spreading
across the surface [syn:
water shamrock,
buckbean,
bogbean,
marsh trefoil,
Menyanthes trifoliata]
English → English (gcide)
Definition: Bog myrtle
Myrtle
\Myr"tle\ (m[~e]r"t'l), n. [F. myrtil bilberry, prop., a
little myrtle, from myrte myrtle, L. myrtus, murtus, Gr.
my`rtos; cf. Per. m[=u]rd.] (Bot.)
A species of the genus
Myrtus, especially
Myrtus communis
. The common myrtle has a shrubby, upright stem,
eight or ten feet high. Its branches form a close, full head,
thickly covered with ovate or lanceolate evergreen leaves. It
has solitary axillary white or rosy flowers, followed by
black several-seeded berries. The ancients considered it
sacred to Venus. The flowers, leaves, and berries are used
variously in perfumery and as a condiment, and the
beautifully mottled wood is used in turning.
[1913 Webster]
Note: The name is also popularly but wrongly applied in
America to two creeping plants, the blue-flowered
periwinkle and the yellow-flowered moneywort. In the
West Indies several myrtaceous shrubs are called
myrtle.
[1913 Webster]
Bog myrtle, the sweet gale.
Crape myrtle. See under
Crape.
Myrtle warbler (Zo["o]l.), a North American wood warbler
(
Dendroica coronata); -- called also
myrtle bird,
yellow-rumped warbler, and
yellow-crowned warbler.
Myrtle wax. (Bot.) See
Bayberry tallow, under
Bayberry.
Sand myrtle, a low, branching evergreen shrub (
Leiophyllum buxifolium
), growing in New Jersey and southward.
Wax myrtle (
Myrica cerifera). See
Bayberry.
[1913 Webster]
bog
\bog\ (b[o^]g), n. [Ir. & Gael. bog soft, tender, moist: cf.
Ir. bogach bog, moor, marsh, Gael. bogan quagmire.]
[1913 Webster]
1. A quagmire filled with decayed moss and other vegetable
matter; wet spongy ground where a heavy body is apt to
sink; a marsh; a morass.
[1913 Webster]
Appalled with thoughts of bog, or caverned pit,
Of treacherous earth, subsiding where they tread.
--R. Jago.
[1913 Webster]
2. A little elevated spot or clump of earth, roots, and
grass, in a marsh or swamp. [Local, U. S.]
[1913 Webster]
Bog bean. See
Buck bean.
Bog bumper (bump, to make a loud noise),
Bog blitter,
Bog bluiter,
Bog jumper, the bittern. [Prov.]
Bog butter, a hydrocarbon of butterlike consistence found
in the peat bogs of Ireland.
Bog earth (Min.), a soil composed for the most part of
silex and partially decomposed vegetable fiber. --P. Cyc.
Bog moss. (Bot.) Same as
Sphagnum.
Bog myrtle (Bot.), the sweet gale.
Bog ore. (Min.)
(a) An ore of iron found in boggy or swampy land; a
variety of brown iron ore, or limonite.
(b) Bog manganese, the hydrated peroxide of manganese.
Bog rush (Bot.), any rush growing in bogs; saw grass.
Bog spavin. See under
Spavin.
[1913 Webster]