Found 2 items, similar to Spanish bayonet.
English → English (WordNet)
Definition: Spanish bayonet
Spanish bayonet
n 1: tall woody-stemmed yucca of southwestern United States and
Mexico having stiff swordlike pointed leaves and a large
cluster of white flowers [syn:
Yucca baccata]
2: a stiff yucca with a short trunk; found in the southern
United States and tropical America; has rigid spine-tipped
leaves and clusters of white flowers [syn:
Yucca aloifolia
]
English → English (gcide)
Definition: Spanish bayonet
Spanish
\Span"ish\, a.
Of or pertaining to Spain or the Spaniards.
[1913 Webster]
Spanish bayonet (Bot.), a liliaceous plant (
Yucca alorifolia
) with rigid spine-tipped leaves. The name is
also applied to other similar plants of the Southwestern
United States and mexico. Called also
Spanish daggers.
Spanish bean (Bot.) See the Note under
Bean.
Spanish black, a black pigment obtained by charring cork.
--Ure.
Spanish broom (Bot.), a leguminous shrub (
Spartium junceum
) having many green flexible rushlike twigs.
Spanish brown, a species of earth used in painting, having
a dark reddish brown color, due to the presence of
sesquioxide of iron.
Spanish buckeye (Bot.), a small tree (
Ungnadia speciosa)
of Texas, New Mexico, etc., related to the buckeye, but
having pinnate leaves and a three-seeded fruit.
Spanish burton (Naut.), a purchase composed of two single
blocks. A
double Spanish burton has one double and two single blocks.
--Luce (Textbook of Seamanship).
Spanish chalk (Min.), a kind of steatite; -- so called
because obtained from Aragon in Spain.
Spanish cress (Bot.), a cruciferous plant (
Lepidium Cadamines
), a species of peppergrass.
Spanish curlew (Zo["o]l.), the long-billed curlew. [U.S.]
Spanish daggers (Bot.) See
Spanish bayonet.
Spanish elm (Bot.), a large West Indian tree (
Cordia Gerascanthus
) furnishing hard and useful timber.
Spanish feretto, a rich reddish brown pigment obtained by
calcining copper and sulphur together in closed crucibles.
Spanish flag (Zo["o]l.), the California rockfish
(
Sebastichthys rubrivinctus). It is conspicuously
colored with bands of red and white.
Spanish fly (Zo["o]l.), a brilliant green beetle, common in
the south of Europe, used for raising blisters. See
Blister beetle under
Blister, and
Cantharis.
Spanish fox (Naut.), a yarn twisted against its lay.
Spanish grass. (Bot.) See
Esparto.
Spanish juice (Bot.), licorice.
Spanish leather. See
Cordwain.
Spanish mackerel. (Zo["o]l.)
(a) A species of mackerel (
Scomber colias) found both in
Europe and America. In America called
chub mackerel,
big-eyed mackerel, and
bull mackerel.
(b) In the United States, a handsome mackerel having bright
yellow round spots (
Scomberomorus maculatus), highly
esteemed as a food fish. The name is sometimes
erroneously applied to other species. See Illust. under
Mackerel.
Spanish main, the name formerly given to the southern
portion of the Caribbean Sea, together with the contiguous
coast, embracing the route traversed by Spanish treasure
ships from the New to the Old World.
Spanish moss. (Bot.) See
Tillandsia (and note at that
entry).
Spanish needles (Bot.), a composite weed (
Bidens bipinnata
) having achenia armed with needlelike awns.
Spanish nut (Bot.), a bulbous plant (
Iris Sisyrinchium)
of the south of Europe.
Spanish potato (Bot.), the sweet potato. See under
Potato.
Spanish red, an ocherous red pigment resembling Venetian
red, but slightly yellower and warmer. --Fairholt.
Spanish reef (Naut.), a knot tied in the head of a
jib-headed sail.
Spanish sheep (Zo["o]l.), a merino.
Spanish white, an impalpable powder prepared from chalk by
pulverizing and repeated washings, -- used as a white
pigment.
Spanish windlass (Naut.), a wooden roller, with a rope
wound about it, into which a marline spike is thrust to
serve as a lever.
[1913 Webster]
Yucca
\Yuc"ca\, n. [NL., from Yuca, its name in St. Domingo.]
(Bot.)
A genus of American liliaceous, sometimes arborescent, plants
having long, pointed, and often rigid, leaves at the top of a
more or less woody stem, and bearing a large panicle of showy
white blossoms.
[1913 Webster]
Note: The species with more rigid leaves (as
Yucca aloifolia
,
Yucca Treculiana, and
Yucca baccata)
are called
Spanish bayonet, and one with softer
leaves (
Yucca filamentosa) is called
bear grass,
and
Adam's needle.
[1913 Webster]
Yucca moth (Zo["o]l.), a small silvery moth (
Pronuba yuccasella
) whose larv[ae] feed on plants of the genus
Yucca.
[1913 Webster]